DanMachi - Volume 06
DanMachi - Volume 06
DanMachi - Volume 06
Weak moonlight filtered through the thin clouds that covered the
night sky.
With the exception of a few stars twinkling here and there, the
dark void overhead felt vast enough to draw earth-dwelling on-
lookers into its depths.
Toward the middle of the city, the taverns were alive with the
sounds of adventurers. However, in this dim residential area they
sounded distant.
One girl kept to the shadows as she made her way into one of
the buildings on her way to meet with a god.
The deity she was talking to sat quietly in the corner of the
room, holding his knees up against his chest.
A cloud shifted in the night sky, flooding the room with moon-
light through the open window. The light illuminated a series of
shelves lining one side of the room. They held numerous potted
plants as well as several bottles of clear liquor. The two figures sat
in the private quarters of the home of Soma Familia’s god.
This was all so that she could be released from the curse of
Soma Familia—so that she could stand next to Bell and the oth-
ers with pride. She had seen her chance and seized the opportu-
nity for a personal audience with Soma himself.
“Lilly knows that this comes without warning, and she apolo-
gizes for that and for every other offense she has committed. But
please, Lilly begs for your mercy…”
She did not make eye contact or even raise her head.
“Oh yes, indeed. Let’s get back to that.” Zanis exaggerated his
words and nodded his head much deeper than normal, almost as
if he were acting in a play. He slowly and carefully enunciated
each of his next words. “Of course, a large sum of money will be
required to exit our group. That’s the only thing that can relieve
Lord Soma’s pain—he’s spent so much time raising you. He’ll
want at least ten million vals.”
Her spirit seemed to drain out of her body the moment that
she understood Zanis’s words.
“…It’s up to you.”
Her own god didn’t know her, nor did he respond to her voice.
Zanis chuckled darkly to himself as he stared down at Lilly,
knowing that any further discussion was useless.
Her face void of any emotion, Lilly stumbled her way out of
the room on shaky legs.
The moment she disappeared from sight, a large figure stood
in the doorway in her place.
“Very good, Chandra. Show them into the small room down
the hall.”
He turned back to face the god in the corner and spoke. “Lord
Soma, I will go conduct negotiations. What is your desire?”
“…It’s up to you.”
“…”
The stone roads are warmed by the sun overhead on this mild af-
ternoon.
The weather’s been nice for several days now; everyone seems
to be in a good mood. The city center overflows with happy
voices. The wide main street is filled with horse-drawn carts,
demi-humans, and travelers in their traveling gear going about
their business.
“But still, I’m so glad that you and the others made it back safe
and sound.”
I still can’t believe that it’s already been three days since we
defeated the Goliath and returned to the surface.
It was a week ago today that we couldn’t get out of the middle
levels and had to go all the way down to the eighteenth. Appar-
ently a lot of people above ground were worried about us. Syr was
definitely one of them. While she couldn’t come into the Dungeon
herself like the goddess did, she sent her coworker Lyu in after us.
Of course, I’ll never forget how happy I was that she would do
that for me.
The warmth of the sun on my skin and the bright skies are
proof that I really did make it out alive. Thanks to that, I can ex-
perience the joy of reuniting with people I thought I would never
see again. I suppose that the more fear and danger you experi-
ence, the happier you are to make it home safe.
I really am back.
Even with all the commotion around me, I can feel my cheeks
pulling back into a smile.
“Lyu.”
Lyu emerges from the doors of the bar to call Syr back inside.
She says a quick good morning and I answer with a morning
greeting of my own.
The hooded cape and battle cloth she wore in the Dungeon are
gone, replaced with her bar-waitress uniform. Seeing her dressed
like this after fighting alongside the strong and beautiful hooded
adventurer feels very weird…There’s a big difference between this
cute waitress and the warrior I know.
“I’m glad to see you are well. You looked little better than a
corpse on our way back from the Dungeon. I was worried about
your health.”
I’d pushed myself way too hard and was half carried back to
the surface. The elf shakes her head softly from side to side and
finally says, “It’s nothing.” Her thin, defined lips loosen slightly.
…It’s only a bit, but I feel like the distance between Lyu and
me has shrunk. Her tone seems slightly more friendly, her ex-
pression softer than usual. It’s extremely slight, but enough to no-
tice.
It wasn’t very long, but the time we spent together in the Dun-
geon allowed me to become a little closer to her.
“Wh-wha?”
“But it’s never all right to sneak a peek, okay?”
“A-all right…!”
When I first came to see her, Syr had already known about the
peeking incident…I kind of saw Lyu naked. She fiercely scolded
me, but it felt more like a punishment.
“If I had sensed any impure emotion, I would have cut him
down on the spot.”
She hits me with that question the moment I get my head back
on my shoulders.
“Well, I, um…”
Syr excitedly brings her hands together with a clap. All I can
do is force a smile.
It’s true that I delivered the final blow with my Skill, Argonaut.
But if it hadn’t been for Lyu and everyone else protecting me, I
would’ve never had a chance to use it. Not only could the floor
boss have taken me out, but there were hundreds of other mon-
sters swarming around the battlefield. I had a lot of help, and I’d
needed it.
It was much more accurate to say that we’d all taken down
that monster.
“One of our regulars has become a famous adventurer! I’m so
proud to work here!” She’s beaming with joy, like it was her own
accomplishment and I’m just some other guy. Her eyes narrow
and mouth widens in a smile that makes me feel ticklish, and she
continues. “How would you like to throw another party to cele-
brate? It’s not every day that you return from a near-death expe-
rience, right? How about this evening?”
“I couldn’t ask you to do that, not after all the trouble I’ve
caused…I don’t think I’d be able to look Ms. Mia in the face…”
The sun sinks out of sight behind the high city wall, covering the
streets in a blue shadow.
I meet Lilly and Welf inside a bar that’s lined with all kinds of
animal masks, from birds to lions. The three of us sit around the
table and clink our mugs together.
“Cheers!”
Smiles overflow around the table like the bubbly foam on the
top of our mugs of ale. We aren’t the only ones having a good
time. Clink, clink! Other groups of adventurers at tables around
us are starting to enjoy a drink after a hard day’s work.
There’s a big red sign that looks a lot like a Familia’s emblem
on the wall that has some kind of insect design. It’s the symbol of
this bar: Hibachitei, the Flaming Wasp.
Some prum girls work their way past us as I share a laugh with
Lilly and Welf.
“That I am…Thanks.”
He bobs his head, looking a bit more bashful than usual. But
that smile on his lips is all the proof I need to know that he’s at-
tained both his goal as well as the pride that goes with it.
Welf had gained enough excelia through our journey into the
middle levels and the many battles on the eighteenth floor to level
up—going from Level 1 to Level 2. At the same time he acquired
the “Forge” Advanced Ability.
Welf is now a High Smith—we can’t let this special day pass by
without commemorating it.
“Mr. Welf, are you now free to mark your work with your Fa-
milia’s brand whenever you want?”
Now that Welf has joined the ranks of the High Smiths, he’s
allowed to engrave the Ἥφαιστος insignia on his weapons and
armor.
This could be the last time I see him. Lilly is looking a little
heavyhearted, too.
“Huh…”
“I’ll join you whenever you call, including for Dungeon crawl-
ing. So don’t worry,” he finishes with a toothy grin.
“Ah-ha-ha…”
“So Bell, you didn’t level up?” Welf changes the subject.
If Welf and the others hadn’t covered for me, bought me time,
I would’ve never landed my last attack. Lyu, however, did almost
everything by herself.
“That bastard was stronger than the rest of them, yeah? It was
tossing upper-class adventurers around like bugs! If another one
of those things shows up, we’ll be wiped out for sure.”
The moment she saw that black thing emerge—she said it had
been sent to eliminate her.
Seeing how she had reacted and hearing what she said, I can’t
shake the feeling that the gods and goddesses have some kind of
connection with the Dungeon. Perhaps these all-knowing deities
are hiding something.
“Did Lady Hestia tell Mr. Bell anything?” Lilly asks, but I
shake my head no. After the battle, the goddess apologized sev-
eral times but dodged the question whenever I asked her.
But she doesn’t want to say, or maybe she doesn’t need to.
We start talking about what happened after the battle and the
current situation.
“Speaking of that, Bell, you all right? I heard the Guild threw
the book at you and Lady Hestia. The penalty had to be pretty
steep.”
“Ah—yeah…”
“…Ouch.”
The Guild knew that Hestia Familia was extremely young and
that we didn’t have much in the way of savings. We were only
fined a few thousand vals—still quite a bit of money, though.
The item drop left over after the battle with the floor boss, Go-
liath’s Hide, was practically forced onto me during the craziness
that followed our victory…It was probably worth enough to cover
the penalty. However, I’ll never forget the goddess walking slowly
to the Guild, carrying large sacks of money, tears dripping down
her face as she shuddered her way there.
“…?”
Thinking back, she hasn’t been her usual self all night.
“Sorry, Mr. Bell. Lilly spaced out.” She responds to the con-
cern in my voice and flashes a smile in an attempt to reassure me
that everything’s okay. “Mr. Bell’s reputation has improved con-
siderably in the past few days. At the very least, the adventurers
who witnessed the battle know Mr. Bell’s strength.”
“Th-that’s great…”
“That rookie sure got some guts! Don’t care if he really is the
record holder, it’s amazing that people swallow all of his lies! I
couldn’t pull that act off in a million years!”
His voice has the timbre of a young boy and seems to fill the
bar corner to corner. I can feel the eyes of other customers start
to focus on us as the three of us glance at the table.
All six of the adventurers, including the prum, have that sym-
bol somewhere on their clothing. They’re all in the same Familia.
The prum leans back in his chair and takes another swig of ale.
Our eyes meet and his lips curl upward. “Anyway, I’ve heard he’s
extremely good at running away. That must be how he got the
level-up—he ran away from that Minotaur until it collapsed from
exhaustion. That’s a bunny for ya! Quite the talent!”
Prums are known for their big eyes, and this one’s no excep-
tion. He keeps talking really loudly, almost like he wants me to
hear him. The other adventurers at the table are doing nothing to
stop him. In fact, they look thoroughly entertained.
“Oh, you know what else? The bunny joined up with two ran-
dom pieces of riffraff! A washed-up smith and some puny sup-
porter. That party’s so unbalanced I’m surprised they can even
stand!”
I turn my back to their table and look at Lilly and Welf. Keh-
keh-keh. The men in their group laugh even harder along with the
prum’s cackling snicker.
My shoulders twitch.
“Cool it, don’t worry. Let ’em say whatever they want.”
“Mr. Bell, don’t listen to them.”
Welf has a cool enough head that he takes another drink from
his mug. Lilly sounds like she’s scolding me.
It’s been a long time since I’ve felt a red surge of anger that
strong. Thanks to Welf and Lilly, though, it’s ebbing away, and I
manage to control myself.
Then, the prum clicks his tongue in our direction as if he’s dis-
appointed that we’ve kept our tempers in check. His next words
take on more of a violent tone.
“I also know that his Familia is led by some goddess not wor-
thy of even the slightest shred of respect. You’d have to be pretty
weak and stupid to join a disgraceful deity like that!!”
Lilly’s staring at me, lost for words. That’s how angry I am.
Lilly’s voice can’t stop me now. My hands are yearning for this
bastard’s throat.
A river of blood flows from his broken nose as his eyes roll
back in his head and several parts of his body start twitching.
He’s out cold.
The bar once again falls silent as the man who threw the kick
and deprived me of my target, Welf, stands on one leg beside me.
His right foot is still outstretched as every set of eyes in the bar
looks his way.
This is an all-out brawl. All tables and chairs within range are
instantly thrust out of the way as we engage the offending adven-
turers to the delight and incitement of the bar’s customers. Mugs
and bottles in their hands, they surround our battle in no time.
I dip and dive again, dodging even more punches and kicks as
Welf and I use a basic formation to overwhelm our opponents,
just like a frontline attacker with middle support in a three-man
cell fighting monsters in the Dungeon.
“…”
However, the last of the prum man’s friends chooses this mo-
ment to make his move.
He’d been sitting in his chair all this time, calmly drinking
what was left in his glass. Crash! He throws it to the floor and
stands. His movements are swift and glamorous—sure, I’m being
distracted and can’t watch too closely, but I still notice—as he ap-
proaches Welf.
“Uwah!”
“Welf?!”
“—”
I’m very confident in my speed and agility, but it feels like he’s
trying to show me up. He’s laughing at me.
“Mr. Bell?!”
I fly backward.
The adventurers watching our brawl jump out of the way and I
plow into one of the round tables behind them. Lilly’s scream
mixes with the splintering sound of wood breaking on impact.
“That’s…Hyacinthus.”
His blue eyes leave me and hover for a moment over the prum
man, who’s still twitching in his broken chair. He looks the other
way, and the bodies of his fallen comrades reflect clearly in his
eyes. He’s the only combatant who still has the strength to stand.
Lilly rushes over to help me, but I can’t climb to my feet even
with her support. Welf has made it back to his knees. The man is
just standing there, looking at us in silence. All of the excited en-
ergy that had filled the tavern a moment ago seems to fizzle out in
an instant.
The muscles in my face start to tense, blood dripping from my
chin as the man fixes his hair.
His blue eyes take on a sadistic gleam. I’m sure that’s what I’m
seeing.
“!”
—That guy.
“It’s your fault that this piss-weak beer started tastin’ foul, too.
Y’killed my buzz, you repulsive wimps. Get outta my sight!”
While much more boorish and harsh than Aiz or the others, he
has the same aura of strength. I’m sure the others here have
picked up just how dangerous this man is.
The last of them gone, a tranquil calm falls within the bar.
…Did he just…help me?
“Eh?” comes out of my suddenly tight throat, and I’m not the
only one. The adventurers who witnessed our brawl waste no
time in getting out of Bete’s way. My butt’s still on the floor as I
look up at his imposing figure. He comes to a stop right in front
of my feet.
I can’t breathe.
First the handsome man and his group, then Loki Familia
leave Hibachitei.
I nod at Lilly and follow Welf’s gaze. The door is still open. I
can see the dark back street and even a piece of the night sky. I
touch my face and instantly feel pain course through my swollen
lip.
We’re the only ones left, but none of us knows what to say.
Welf, Lilly, and I have made our way to a hidden room under
an old church, Hestia Familia’s home.
We’re not hurt too badly, but the goddess was extremely sur-
prised to see us covered in bumps and bruises when we arrived.
Lilly told her what happened and the goddess seemed to accept
her explanation. We apologized to the bar’s owner after the fight
and told him that Hestia Familia would pay for the damages.
“Mr. Bell has been acting like Mr. Welf! Mr. Bell has been be-
having more and more like a violent adventurer ever since he met
Mr. Welf!”
“Hey, hey, you know that’s not true…Wait a sec, there has got
to be a nicer way to say that!”
The goddess listens to what she has to say and does her best to
smile at us.
“I’m surprised at you, getting into a fight like this. Then again,
you are a boy, Bell.”
“…”
Her thin fingers are gentle as she rubs more cream onto my
face. I feel really bad for making her worry, but I stay silent.
“However, fights are never a good thing! It’s just like what
your supporter said. You realize you really got hurt this time!”
Everything that happened in the bar, all the anger, I can’t keep
it in anymore.
This might be the first time I’ve ever talked back to her. Lilly
and Welf freeze and look up at me.
“I’m happy you would get this angry for my sake. But doing so
put you in a lot of danger and that makes me much sadder.”
“See? That’s how I feel. I know it’s unfair, but please don’t get
angry if you hear someone say something bad about me. Gods are
happiest when their children are healthy.” And then she smiles at
me. “Make a joke out of it next time. Something like ‘that
wouldn’t anger my goddess, she’s got a big heart’ or something
like that.”
She gently accepts all of my anger and rage, contains it, and
helps me let it go.
I fall silent, nod, and apologize. “I’ll put up with it next time…
I’m sorry.”
Tap, tap. She pats the bed next to her. I do what she’s asking
and take a seat on the bed. She gently runs her fingers through
my hair. I’m starting to blush, but I don’t move away.
Lilly and Welf watch the two of us. They do nothing to try and
hide their amusement.
A calm, serene mood fills the hidden room under the old, run-
down church.
“Lilly’s worried about how the other Familia will respond. It
would be nice if they didn’t hold a grudge and come after Mr.
Bell.”
Welf runs his hand over his black jacket, looking for damage.
He doesn’t even look up when he adds, “I started it. Bell should
be fine.”
I bow a little bit, but the goddess forces a smile. “Oh, it’s fine.
Do you know what Familia they were from?” she asks me.
Hyacinthus grinned at the little man, who still had the well-de-
fined outline of a boot on his face. The rest of the group traded
laughs, further damaging their prum ally’s ego.
“Do you know how worried I was? I just about had a heart at-
tack when I heard you hadn’t returned from the Dungeon.”
“I-I’m sorry…”
She was so happy when I came to see her the other day that
she cried. The image of her first tear rolling out from beneath her
glasses is still fresh in my memory.
“…Yes.”
She didn’t have to say anything else for me to know what she
was talking about.
I slowly nod my head. Looking back at her, she also nods and
says, “I see.”
I see a flash as she adjusts her glasses—it feels like her emer-
ald-green eyes gaze right through me.
“Huh?”
Eina just grins that same grin as my body shrinks back into the
chair, my face drifting backward. “Let’s do our best,” she says, her
eyes smiling at me.
The work of High Smiths, those who have acquired the Forge
ability, puts the quality of all others’ work to shame. This is Welf’s
first job as a High Smith; he’s a bit more excited than usual. I
can’t wait to see what kind of armor and weapons come out of his
workshop.
“In that case, you will resume Dungeon activities once your
new equipment is complete, yes? Which floor are you planning on
going to first?”
Eina gives a few more pieces of advice as she and I work out a
few finer details for my battle party’s return to the Dungeon.
“Y-yes…”
“But I’ll say this much: Nothing good can happen from two
groups fighting with each other.”
She leans in closer and talks about last night’s events. “In the
worst case, the entire city of Orario could become a battlefield if
two Familias fight head-to-head.” A chill of fear runs down my
spine as I gulp down the air in my throat.
“…?”
We had just returned to the lobby and I was about to say good-
bye to Eina at the reception counter.
“Umm, this…”
I’m sure both of them are older than me. I picked up on the
aura of strength emanating from Daphne right away, but she
seems calm and in control. The same can’t be said for her friend
Cassandra. The air about her is distant, a childlike innocence in
her eyes.
I’m pretty sure they were waiting for me, watching all the ad-
venturers come in and out of the Guild from a spot where they
could see everything.
“Oww,” comes a soft cry. Daphne ignores both the cry and the
beads of cold sweat running down my face and shoves the invita-
tion into my hands.
“You must inform your goddess. Got that? You got the invita-
tion.”
“…I understand.”
“My condolences.”
That night the goddess and I are at home, just like usual. I tell her
everything that happened this afternoon.
We’ve just finished dinner. All that is left on the table are two
cups of hot tea. The goddess was tired after a long day at work, so
I’m washing dishes.
“It’s been about a month and a half since Ganesha held one…I
imagined someone would organize something soon.”
“No, it’s all right, Bell. You don’t have to feel that way…The
truth is, I don’t like Apollo that much.”
“Eh? Can I ask why?”
I start putting dry dishes away, but my mind won’t stop racing.
This may be a little out of the blue, but Orario is greeting spring
now.
“R-really…?”
The queen of a distant land…Well, maybe not that far, but the
goddess has achieved a radiant balance between cute and beauty.
“My apologies, Hestia, Bell. Preparing everything for us, in-
cluding these clothes, must’ve been difficult.”
She lightly pulls the skirt of her dress out to the sides with her
fingers and does a little curtsy. I give her a big nod, as big as my
stiff neck will allow.
Her eyes are the same as always, half closed. But there’s the
joy in her expression that I haven’t seen before. Swish, swish. Her
tail happily flicks back and forth beneath her dress.
“Y-yes!” Slowly but surely, I reach out and take Lady Hestia’s
extended hand.
Other guests make their way into the building as well, men es-
corting the women. Lord Miach and I each take the hands of our
partners and join the line flowing deeper into the palace.
The ballroom is already noisy with guests who had arrived be-
fore us. And, of course, the ballroom is just as well decorated as
everything else. Many chandeliers equipped with magic-stone
lamps hang from the ceiling, and long tables with elaborate
spreads of food run down the sides and back of the ballroom.
There’s a balcony beyond the tall, thin windows.
The sun has already set, and no light is coming in from out-
side. This building is located on North Main, surrounded by the
houses of some of Orario’s wealthiest residents. That could be
why the sounds of the taverns and nightlife feel very far away.
This place is so quiet that it’s hard to believe I’m still in the same
city.
It’s amazing that a place that can give you the feeling of step-
ping into another world exists in Orario.
“Hephaistos, Také!”
“You look well,” says Lord Miach. Both sides smile and say
hello.
“You brought Mikoto, eh, Také? Thanks for what you did the
other day.”
Her long black hair has been expertly braided and matches her
flowing dress. She’s physically shaking…I’m glad it’s not just me.
I can relate. I don’t blame her for standing there with her eyes
flying left and right. Lord Miach and Lady Hephaistos continue
their conversation beside us.
“Ah, Hermes.”
Miss Asfi is right beside him, her silver glasses sitting comfort-
ably on her face. “Lord Hermes, please lower your voice…”
There’s a hint of protest in her tone as she sighs under her breath.
“Why did you come over here? We haven’t had direct contact
for very long at all.”
“Th-thank you.”
“Appreciated…”
“C-cute…?!”
I can clearly hear the excitement in the voice of our host. Quite
a few other gods agree with him, shouting and clapping in ap-
proval.
Lord Apollo’s gaze sweeps over the crowd, but then seems to
instantly lock on me.
…?
He raises his arms high into the air as the last echoes of his
voice make their way through the ballroom.
Just like Lady Hestia said, we should wait for things to settle
down a bit.
“Well, it’s not every day that we get to do something like this,
so let’s enjoy the party. Let’s dig into the food, Bell!”
“Ah, sure.”
The goddess and I join Lord Miach and the others in their cir-
cle next to a table. All of them already have wineglasses in their
hands.
“Um, Miss Mikoto. Thank you for everything you did on the
eighteenth floor. You did so much to help me…”
Not only was she part of the search party, she also came to our
rescue when my goddess was kidnapped by other adventurers. I
tell her how grateful I am, but she just lightly shakes her head.
“Do not forget what you accomplished, Sir Bell. Facing down a
floor boss under those circumstances and delivering the final
blow…It’s embarrassing to say this myself, but your strength and
bravery left a profound impression on me.”
“Miss Mikoto…”
“Captain Ouka and Miss Chigusa would also like to lend you
their strength, just as I would.”
“If I may ask you a question. I’ve heard that you grow at an in-
credible rate. Would you be willing to share some advice?”
“Please don’t tell stories like that!” I take another look around
the room.
Lord Hermes turns to face me. “Yes,” I say as I make eye con-
tact.
Ph-Phallus?
Why would they do that…? I have no clue.
Lady Hestia said that she doesn’t like Lord Apollo…Did some-
thing happen?
“Also, he is extremely…tenacious.”
“Huh?”
“Who’s that…?”
“That, Bell, is Lady Freya. I’m sure you’ve come across the
name Freya Familia before?”
Silver eyes and a well-defined body line, her large breasts and
thin waist are hidden behind a dress that looks like it was woven
in heaven itself. She takes one step forward, and all eyes in the
room lock onto her. Another step and the gazes follow. She’s
quite a ways from me, but I’m already hot under the collar.
“—Huh?!”
Lady Hestia’s face emerges from the table, takes one look at
Lady Freya, and then glances at me with wide eyes.
“Bwuh?!”
“Any child who sees a Goddess of Beauty will get brainwashed
by her charm!”
Mikoto and Nahza are fighting hard against Lady Freya’s in-
fluence. Nahza’s eyes are clenched shut as she shakes her head
back and forth. Mikoto has turned the other way, but her entire
face is blushing. Only Asfi seems to be holding her own. She’s
looking out in the middle of nowhere, like a daydreaming kid.
Looking at how people react to her now, I don’t blame her for
staying up in the tower.
“—”
“I’m glad to see you are looking well,” says Lady Hephaistos
next to my goddess. Lady Hestia looks like she’s trying to hold
back a torrent with a cork.
The words roll off Lady Freya’s tongue as she glances toward
the small mob of male gods that have assembled around her.
All of them seem to melt as her silver eyes pass by. Lord Her-
mes is weak-kneed, a dumbstruck look on his face. Lord
Takemikazuchi is blushing a light shade of pink and clears his
throat with an “ahem.” Lord Miach bows and compliments her by
saying, “You are quite beautiful this evening.”
Not a heartbeat later, the heels of the expensive shoes that be-
long to their female followers find their way to the toes of the
male deities. “Gah?!” “Uwoh?!” “Nuah?!” come their yelps of
pain. I take a step back.
She leans forward, extending her arm, and strokes the side of
my face.
“S-s-sorry!”
“Yes…!!”
Her twin ponytails are sweeping out behind her like they’re
trying to express just how dangerous the other goddess truly is.
But Lady Freya is laughing to herself. “My, my, how disap-
pointing.”
My body cools down the farther away she gets. Finally, the last
lock of her silver hair disappears.
The storm has passed. A new voice cuts through the calm.
“Loki?!”
A radiant girl with blond hair and golden eyes, wearing an ele-
gant dress.
“…?!”
“Just when did you get here?! You’re not the type to sneak in!”
demands Lady Hestia.
It sounds like Aiz and her goddess Loki only just arrived.
Everyone was so preoccupied with Lady Freya that no one no-
ticed.
My body feels hot again, but it’s not going away this time.
I can’t take my eyes off her. A princess from one of my old pic-
ture books has come to life in front of my very eyes.
Her pale green dress is open in the front and in the back, com-
pletely exposing her delicate, feminine shoulders. Sparkling
beads and various other decorations are sown in as accents in
several places on the dress. I have no doubt that her goddess was
in charge of the design and Lady Loki had no problem spending a
large amount of money to show her affection for Aiz. The finish-
ing touch is the long, silky gloves that extend all the way past her
elbows.
Part of her golden hair is tied with a ribbon behind her head.
The rest of it is flowing gracefully down her back.
Her angelic face and thin neck, supple breasts making just the
right amount of cleavage, thin waist and fluttering dress…
“Ah…”
“…!”
Aiz lifts her face and we make eye contact. Neither of us can
say a word.
I feel my face blush as she quickly looks to the floor, her hands
together in front of her stomach as her shoulders lightly twitch up
and down.
Shff, her body swishes back and forth under Lady Loki’s
shadow.
S-so cute…!
“…Ehh?”
“Ouch?!”
My goddess buries the toe of her shoe deep into the side of my
shin. Is it that obvious how I’m feeling? Does my face betray me?
I grab my leg and fight back the tears when suddenly I feel
Lady Loki’s eyes on me.
Her vermilion eyes carve right through me. Every single mus-
cle in my mouth and throat tenses up. She doesn’t even blink. Is
that a hint of annoyance? Well, whatever it is, it’s making me un-
comfortable.
“Nah, this kiddo does nothin’ for me. My Aiz is so much better
it’s like comparin’ heaven ’n’ earth!”
“Anyone can see that my Bell is much cuter than your Wallen-
something! So charming, just like an adorable little rabbit!!”
As for me, I’m absolutely horrified. They hate each other. All
of the warmth in my body suddenly fizzles out, plunging me into
despair.
“That’s my line!!”
How pathetic. I have neither the guts to break away from the
goddess’s grasp, nor the courage to approach Lady Loki. Aiz turns
away, her delicate shoulder blades flashing for a moment from
beneath her hair. She’s so distant now—is this how things are
going to be from now on? Once again, reality has made itself
clear. The amount of time I was able to spend that close to her on
the eighteenth floor was really special.
More and more people are gathering around Lady Loki every
second. Finally, I tear my eyes away from her as the painful real-
ity of my mediocrity sinks in.
I move away from the group of people, alone, find a quiet spot,
and lean against the wall to avoid bothering anyone.
I take a look out over the party. The bright chandeliers hang-
ing from the ceiling light everything up like a work of art.
I can’t help but feel that way watching these beautiful men and
women partner up and start dancing.
Maybe it’s because I’m alone, but I feel more and more like I
don’t belong, like I’m sticking out. The unfamiliar environment
keeps me feeling uneasy.
It’s pretty close to how I felt when I first started crawling the
Dungeon.
If I have a few more chances like this in the future, maybe I’ll
get used to this world, too.
“…”
I don’t have to walk far. One of the tall windows was left open
and I step outside.
Cool air envelops me the moment my foot hits the cement bal-
cony.
All of the stress and tension that had built up start to melt as I
take a few breaths of fresh air.
My mind is clear.
“…?”
I walk out to the ornately carved hand railing and hear some
strange sounds coming from below.
Isn’t that…?
I can’t make out all of their words. My body moves on its own.
They’re quite a ways from the balcony, but I can also make out
their lip movements. With that, plus snippets of their voices, I get
a general idea what they’re talking about.
Zanis…?
I know it’s not nice to eavesdrop, but I lean a little farther off
the balcony.
“Bell?”
“!”
“Ah…Nothing really.”
“Th-thank you…”
Lord Hermes has one glass in each hand and holds one of
them out in front of me. I take it and thank him.
“You and Hestia just keep making progress. I’ve known who
you are for a while now, but after seeing what you can do on the
eighteenth floor, you can count me as one of your fans.”
Seeing Lord Hermes come out here was a little scary at first,
but there’s something about his friendly smile that eases the ten-
sion in my shoulders. He compliments, teases, and jokes as the
two of us get settled. Lord Hermes is by far the best oral tactician
I’ve ever met.
Muffled but beautiful music makes its way from the ballroom’s
dance floor through the window in front of us. The gorgeous
tones fill my ears as Lord Hermes and I start talking like friends.
“Oh?”
“Orario has money and, um, I could meet lots of cute girls, ful-
fill any dream…He told me that joining a beautiful goddess’s Fa-
milia and being part of a big family was more than just a possibil-
ity.”
“—Ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha!”
Lord Hermes tilts his chin toward the night sky and laughs
from deep within his belly.
“So then, you spent your entire life in the town where you were
born until you came to Orario?”
“Now they are, sure. But it wasn’t that way until very recently.
Fifteen years ago, to be exact.”
“That’s true, but not in the way that you’re thinking. You see,
the shift in power all started with a failed quest.”
It sounds like he’s about to get to the juicy part of the story.
Lord Hermes holds out his hand and sticks up three fingers.
“This world has burdened Orario with the Three Great
Quests.”
“During the era that you children call Ancient Times, three
monsters with incredible power escaped from the Dungeon—the
quests are to eliminate them.”
No other city can rival Orario in terms of pure power and in-
fluence. This is directly due to the Dungeon, a place where mon-
sters continuously spawn and provide adventurers with nearly
limitless opportunities to level up. Aboveground, monsters and
humans are much weaker, meaning that adventurers have a very
difficult time acquiring excelia—and chances to level up are hard
to come by. I’ve heard that the strongest adventurers in other
cities are only Level 2, rarely making it to Level 3.
Lord Hermes puts down two fingers in turn. He raises the last
one up to his face.
“The last one, the Black Dragon, was too strong and wiped
them out.”
The bravest of the heroes sacrificed his own life to cut out one
of the beast’s eyes, forcing the Dragon King to retreat into the
clouds.
Words have left me, but with Lord Hermes’s story replaying in
my mind I manage to grunt an affirmation.
“It was just a sign of the changing times. Even the Guild,
which had supported them through thick and thin for genera-
tions, didn’t protect a feeble Zeus and Hera.”
“That’s the fall of Zeus and how the Orario you know came to
be.”
“…”
“The peoples of the world still yearn for the completion of the
last of the Three Grand Quests, the slaying of the Black Dragon.
As a citizen of Orario, you will have a part to play.”
He just explained how the once powerful and famous Zeus Fa-
milia and the fate of the city of Orario were intertwined.
But at the very least, the ones closest to that Dragon in power
are—the warriors belonging to the two most powerful Familias.
“What is it?”
“That’s a tough one. The idea that they would return to Tenkai
sounds pretty convincing, but no one really knows what hap-
pened to that good-natured old man. He might be out scouring
the globe for new heroes, or he could be hiding in some shack,
wallowing in despair. Knowing him, he could be traveling to the
ends of the earth just to see what’s there…That’s more likely.”
“I-I see.”
I look away and say that I’m not really interested. For some
reason, I can’t give him a direct answer.
Hearing that those two deities were chased out of the city
makes me think.
If for some reason I was drawn into a battle for power and my
side lost…Lady Hestia and I…Would we be banished, too?
I can’t ignore this and assume that it’s someone else’s prob-
lem. It’s a little scary.
“Well, our chat went a little long. Sorry to take so much of your
time, Bell.”
“N-no, it’s all right. Thank you for talking with me.”
“Eh?”
I follow his gaze and, sure enough, the center of the ballroom
is sparkling, alive with movement.
“That grandfather of yours told you, didn’t he? That Orario has
enough gorgeous women and beautiful ladies to turn the world
green with envy? This is your chance to enjoy it.”
“Eh? Um…what?”
Oh no, it’s that grin. I’ve seen Lord Hermes make that face be-
fore.
“Uh, uhhh…”
The deity nods and looks at me with that cheek-splitting smile
plastered on his face.
At the same time, “All right, that settles it!!” Lord Hermes
sounds much more excited than he did a minute ago. “I’m no God
of Love, but that doesn’t mean I can’t make sparks fly!”
Like hell I can ask her. Even if I did, there’s no way she’d ac-
cept. But above all else, our goddesses would never allow it to
happen!
Perfectly crafted melodies from the musicians fill the dimly lit
ballroom. The magic-stone lamps on the chandeliers have been
turned down, leaving the dance floor illuminated by moonlight.
Lady Hestia and Lady Loki are still arguing in the back corner.
Aiz is standing just behind them. I bet that anyone who extended
a hand to her was immediately driven away by her overprotective
goddess under threat of the wrath of Loki Familia. I doubt any-
one has even said hello.
“Oh my, how exquisite you are on this night, Kenki! May I,
Hermes, have this dance?”
Lord Hermes turns away, his hand over his face. It feels like
I’m watching an actor on the stage more than anything else.
Lord Hermes grins and walks away. Aiz and I are alone, star-
ing at each other.
“…”
“…”
I can’t waste the chance that Lord Hermes gave me. But more
than that, I can’t walk away from the confused girl in front of me.
The shame of abandoning her would be unbearable.
I look back toward Aiz and see that Nahza is standing beside
her.
The two of us watch with wide eyes as Lord Miach and Nahza
step toward each other.
“Gladly.”
The two of them went out of their way to help me; I can’t just
stand here anymore.
“…Gladly.”
Now all I need to do is listen to the beat, watch the others, and
try to dance.
“Uwah—”
“Nnn—”
“Calm your mind. Do not try to lead by pulling her with your
arms.”
“!”
“Relax your shoulders. Take your eyes off your feet and look
ahead.”
“S-Sir Bell. The battle is not lost as long as you don’t step on
your own feet.”
I look into her eyes, glistening in the moonlight. I’m not sure
who breaks down first, but we suddenly smile.
—Right?
—L-left, please.
Two loud voices reach my ears from the corner of the ball-
room. I catch a glimpse of two raging goddesses from the corner
of my eye. Seeing Lady Hestia’s hair flare out like that makes my
blood run cold.
But at that moment, Lord Hermes points and Miss Asfi’s dress
flutters through the air.
““Ngggh!!””
“This is my first…”
“Huh?”
“R-really?”
“Yes.”
That’s unexpected.
“…!!”
The dance over, Aiz and I find Lord Hermes and the others stand-
ing close to the ballroom wall.
I lead Aiz as far as I can until finally I let go. I can still feel her
fingers, delicate and warm, in the palm of my hand. My head is
somewhere in the clouds, but Aiz sighs as all of her muscles relax
at once.
“Um, thank you so much, for all of your help. You, too, Lord
Hermes…”
“Glad to be of service.”
““Hermes!””
Snatch! Two arms suddenly pull him off his feet and drag him
into the corner. “Gyaaaaaah!!” A scream of pain cuts through the
air. The color drains from my face.
Lord Apollo, the host for the evening, appears in front of our
group.
Wait a minute, why did the musicians stop playing? It’s eerily
quiet in here.
“It brings me great pleasure to see you are indulging. That lets
me know hosting this Celebration was worth it.”
The god wearing a crown of laurels locks his eyes on Lady Hes-
tia as soon as he finishes his general greeting.
“My dear Luan came home so beaten and bloodied that day I
had to hide my eyes…My soul wept in his presence!”
Lord Apollo puts his hand on his chest like an actor trying to
be overly dramatic before spreading his arms open wide. He
points out his other followers, all of them crying as if on cue. A
figure emerges from behind them. “Aah, Luan!” Lord Apollo cries
as he rushes to his side.
“I didn’t, I didn’t!”
Were they paid off? Were they really there?…Either way, this
is no coincidence.
“Wait, Apollo. It was my child who made the first move. Surely
Hestia does not deserve all of the blame.”
The corners of his lips curl upward into a dark expression unfit
for a deity.
—“War Game.”
“—It’s unfair, Hestia. You keeping such a cute boy all to your-
self…”
Zing!
“Lies!! All lies!! Don’t get the wrong idea, Bell!! This airheaded
creep wouldn’t leave me alone, and I shot him down right away!
Do you think a goddess as young and pure as me would accept an
offer from a perverted bastard with standards like that?!”
The air around Lady Hestia is pulsing, the heat from her red
face pushing me back.
Passion that has gone too far, burning bright like the sun.
—Phallus.
The goddess turns her back on Lord Apollo when he asks for
her response.
“—”
“…”
The goddess pulls me past him, but I look back over my shoul-
der.
The sun has risen on the morning after the Celebration of the
Gods.
Bell Cranell
Level 2
Strength: C 635 Defense: D 590->594
Utility: C 627 Agility: B 741 Magic: D 529
Luck: I
Magic
(Firebolt)
• Swift-Strike Magic
Skills
(Heroic Desire, Argonaut)
• Charges automatically with active action
It went up a little…
He looked over his Status one more time, his gaze trained on
his Defense, which had improved since his return from the Dun-
geon.
He hadn’t set foot belowground since the battle with the Go-
liath on the eighteenth floor five days ago. A full two days had
passed since the brawl at Hibachitei. The hit he took from Hy-
acinthus during the fight that day was strong enough to earn ex-
celia and be reflected in his Status.
His Level 3 wasn’t just for show. Bell scratched the back of his
head as memories of that embarrassing sequence of events
floated to the surface.
At the same time, Hestia had just changed into her uniform.
She’d been muttering curses under her breath since the moment
the two of them arrived at home last night. She closed the closet
door, sat down on the sofa, and called out to the boy.
“I-I will…”
“I will.”
“And for the time being, it might be a good idea to work with
Mikoto and her group. Také knows what’s going on, so they
should allow you to join their battle party.”
The boy had equipped the armor that was still damaged from
the battle on the eighteenth floor of the Dungeon. He was wearing
his old boots in place of the greaves that had been completely de-
stroyed. Hestia Knife and Ushiwakamaru strapped firmly to his
lower back, Bell stood in front of the door, ready to reenter the
Dungeon.
Hestia smiled back at the boy. She was due to work a shift at
one of Hephaistos Familia’s shops in the tower. Bell opened the
door and led the way up the staircase that connected their room
to the surface.
The short staircase was dimly lit and lined with dusty, unused
bookshelves. Bell listened to Hestia’s footsteps as he pulled back
the segment of wall in the back of one of the church’s old storage
rooms.
Emerging from the narrow room, the boy took a look around.
The worn-down place of worship still had an altar at the back, but
weeds of all shapes and sizes were growing out of the floor. The
ceiling, or rather the roof, had many holes that let through beams
of late-morning sunlight. Bell paused for a moment to look at the
blue sky through one of the larger ones and resolved to find the
time to make this place look a little better.
…Magic?
Bell had just started walking forward again when his senses
tingled. He looked up.
It was the slight ripple in the air produced when mages were
either in the middle of their trigger spell or casting Magic. It was
very faint, but since Bell was not a magic user himself, he didn’t
know what it was for sure.
“—”
Then, the moment the sun’s rays touched his face in front of
the ruined old church—
Eyes glared down at him from every angle. The figures had
created a perimeter around the front of the church. They were
carrying bows and staffs.
—Apollo Familia.
All weapons were drawn the moment Bell came into view.
Archers drew back their arrows, magic users stood ready with
only the last line of their trigger spell left unsaid. The whole city
block was inundated with magical energy, an unnatural breeze
cutting through the morning stillness.
A male elf with half of his face hidden by a scarf raised one
arm as if he were in charge of this team of adventurers. Bell’s
body took over—sprinting back inside.
Not even a moment behind, the elf thrust his arm down—and
a deafening explosion followed.
The seventh block of Orario lay just north of West Main Street.
“A fire, meow?!”
The pillar of smoke had worked its way up into the clouds.
“Quiet.”
“…”
“?!”
The wooden door at the back of the church flung open so fast
it fell off its hinges.
All that was there to greet his eyes was a burning pile of rub-
ble. All that was left of home.
“____SHYAAA!”
“?!”
“BuAHH!”
Bell wrapped his right arm around her legs, completely ignor-
ing the ash coating his face. He took off as fast as he could in an
effort to get away from their pursuers.
Had they thrown all formalities to the wind, even ignoring the
Guild’s impending retribution?
“Apollo Familia!”
The two yelled at the top of their lungs as Bell charged through
the three-meder-wide back alley.
“Eh?!”
Hestia’s choice of words caught him off guard, but there was
something much, much more to it.
Bell had the look on his face of a child lost in the streets, his
eyes moistening. Hestia’s voice snapped him back into the pre-
sent.
His only option was to escape their net. Choosing the narrow-
est path, Bell willed his legs to go even faster. Just beyond that—
“?!”
Five on each side, the team of elves and animal people already
had their glinting arrowheads pointed in his direction.
Bell glared at them. Hestia’s gasp filled his ears, but she didn’t
take another breath.
The boy leaned forward, kicked off the ground, and focused
solely on the end of the path. Sprinting straight ahead, he was
able to avoid the volley of arrows loosed at him from both sides.
Bell tore through the path, every inch the rabbit that had be-
come his reputation. Not a single arrow hit its mark. Angry yells
and the sound of footsteps on shingles filled the air as Bell man-
aged to put more distance between them.
The wall was fast approaching until Bell slammed his foot into
the ground—and took to the air.
“Uu—WAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA-
AAA!!”
A great leap.
They were the highest authority inside Orario. None of his at-
tackers would be able to lay a finger on him there once he got in-
side.
“!”
Bell spun around to face the voice that came from behind him.
“Lord Apollo chases any child he likes to the ends of the earth.
At least until he has them.”
“…!”
“It was the same for Cassandra and me. He chased us from the
moment he saw us. City to city, country to country…Until we re-
signed ourselves, he was always there. It’s just a matter of time
now. It’s merely a question of sooner or later.” Daphne revealed a
piece of her past mixed with a warning.
Daphne’s story made Hestia realize what was really going on.
Apollo was taking away all of Bell’s options one by one. She was
instantly filled with regret, and her dislike of the passionate god
turned to utter hatred.
—He is extremely…tenacious.
This time, it was the words that Hermes shared with him at
the Celebration that flared up inside Bell’s head.
“…I refuse.”
Tap, tap. Daphne hit the palm of her hand against the swords
strapped to her waist a few times. Bell shook his head no.
Bell declined her offer and took a few careful steps back. Hes-
tia sighed in his arms.
“Should’ve expected that. Okay, then—sic ’em!”
Daphne drew her sword at the same moment she gave the
order and pointed directly at Bell. Three of her team moved as
one, charging straight for the boy.
However, Bell turned his back to them and ran across the
rooftop toward the Guild.
The team of three attackers saw their window and moved in.
“O-okay!”
Bell whipped his now-free right hand around his back and
grabbed the Hestia Knife. Their opponents arrived a heartbeat
later.
“Uwah?!”
Bell swatted away the oncoming sword with his knife before
spinning and intercepting a spear coming in from the side. He
sidestepped a slice, dodged a stab, ducked under a sweep. He
avoided their attacks by the narrowest of margins.
At this rate…!
“Firebolt!”
“Going!”
“?!”
“Ugh—?!”
She was not like Hyacinthus and the others who cherished
their leader. Daphne had a much less favorable opinion of Apollo
due to having been forcefully conscripted into Apollo Familia.
However, he was her family now and treated her well. She would
follow his orders; she felt it was her duty. At the same time, he
was much friendlier toward the ones he favored—and her god
tended to favor young men.
Now that very same god wanted Bell. Although she pitied him,
she would not turn her back on her god’s wishes.
A voice came from behind her. Cassandra, the only one left on
the rooftop other than her, cautiously got her attention.
“Stop what?”
“Another dream?”
After all, all sheltered girls had dreams of their own as well as
time to be lost in the curse of their “magical allure.” It was almost
laughable.
Daphne frowned. She didn’t want to put up with this now. But
she knew if she didn’t at least ask, the girl would get even more
annoying. Daphne cocked an eyebrow and looked at Cassandra.
“Daph!”
Central Park was located where all eight main streets met in the
center of the city.
“Yes, Lilly thinks so, too…Mr. Bell has never been this late,
and would send a message if it were to happen.”
“Those weird blasts are still going off…Am I the only one with
a bad feeling about this?” The man voiced his concerns as he
tightened his grip.
“…”
They were waiting for Bell at Babel’s west gate, which directly
faced West Main. The first explosion happened several minutes
ago and had yet to stop. The sounds were unnatural, very similar
to those created by Magic. Citizens and adventurers alike poured
into Central Park from the main roads. The usually quiet and
mundane park was coming alive with fear and panic. Lilly anx-
iously watched all of the people pouring in from West Main.
The crowd of people had grown to the point where they could
hear snippets of conversations.
“Right!”
Two figures looked down from the roof of the tallest building
situated close to North West Main, a little ways removed from the
destructive game of cat and mouse.
“Is Lady Freya planning to stay out of this one?” Asfi adjusted
her white cape as she spoke. Hermes brought his hand to his
chin, muttering to himself in a soft voice.
The odds were stacked heavily against Bell. The boy was
tasked with trying to escape as well as protect his goddess in the
face of an all-out assault—he was outnumbered more than one
hundred to one.
His best guess was that she derived some kind of pleasure
watching the ever-changing boy react to a challenging environ-
ment. She had done the same thing less than a week ago; he was
there.
It wasn’t hard to picture Freya rejoicing in the boy’s “glow,”
which was no doubt growing at this very moment.
“I’m the one and only Hermes, you know? I am and always will
be an observer.”
Asfi didn’t say anything, only sighed as she pictured the many
problems she would have to solve in the near future.
“Yes, sir…”
The blond girl’s face was blank, but a small anxious twinge of
worry filled her eyes as she looked off into the distance.
The dwarf, Gareth, and the elf, Reveria, sat on a sofa in the
room and dissected the situation.
“Been a long time since this many people were fighting in the
city.”
Tiona’s twin sister, Tione, posed a new question for the group.
Bete answered her with a very disinterested tone.
“Finn…”
“Okay…I understand.”
Looking past her reflection in the glass, Aiz watched the omi-
nous black cloud spread over the city.
Hestia firmly in his arms, he weaved his way through the back-
streets in a desperate attempt to escape the net his enemies had
set for him.
“Th-there’s more…?!”
Bell focused forward as soon as Hestia’s warning reached his
ears.
Bell slowed down only enough to let the goddess safely out of
his arms and onto the ground before drawing both knives and
picking up speed again.
“?!”
“Uwah?!”
One of the absolute laws of the land was that a mortal cannot
kill a god. Only other gods had that ability.
In any case, Bell could not let the hunters capture Hestia. He
had to protect her and keep moving.
“B-Bell, they can’t defend against your Magic. Isn’t that our
best option? You can take them down one after the other!”
“…?”
The sea of enemies around him making Bell slightly dizzy, his
ruby-red eyes noticed an emblem on one particular adventurer.
What he had seen from the balcony on the night of the Cele-
bration…
Bell could see the two figures clearly in his mind. A moment
later—
“—”
“?!”
The man charged at the same time that Bell shoved Hestia into
the opening of another side street.
His advance was too fast to follow. All Bell could see was a
long rouge blade shining with flaming providence—a flamberge.
“Bell?!”
“Dahh?!”
Hyacinthus spun out of the lock and went back on the offen-
sive. Two knives and one longsword clashed over and over at high
speed, sparks flying.
Hestia had fallen silent, her eyes trembling as her ears were
overwhelmed by constant metallic echoes. Bell knew there was no
escape from this enemy; he had no choice but to engage him
head-to-head.
This particular backstreet was very long and narrow. Bell was
continuously pressed deeper and deeper down the street in an ef-
fort to dodge the oncoming attacks. The true onslaught had
begun.
“—”
Bell’s right arm was flung out of the way by the rouge blade’s
vicious sweep. By instinct, the boy used that momentum to bring
his left arm forward.
“?!”
The rouge blade arced through the air and came down hard
from above. Bell crossed the blades of the Hestia Knife and Ushi-
wakamaru to stop the weapon just above his head.
The two knives pressed against the flamberge, and the com-
batants stared each other down through the cross they formed.
Bell saw his own fear reflected in the eyes of his smiling foe.
—Level 3.
Bell’s thoughts turned to the moment that they first met. The
“fight” at the bar where he was unable to defend himself.
Bell pushed off the ground, focusing all of his strength into his
arms and neck, and managed to force the rouge blade upward.
Bell glared at his assailant.
“UHH____AAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH-
HHHHHHH?!”
The handsome man took a quick step back to gain some dis-
tance. Now was Bell’s chance and he wasn’t going to waste it.
“HAAAA!!”
Top speed.
“—Slow.”
However.
“—”
The Hestia Knife cut nothing but air, and Ushiwakamaru was
stopped in its tracks. Neither one of the blades could make it past
the heavily decorated flamberge. Its blade glowed with the inten-
sity of the sun with each swipe. Each impact hit with the veracity
of flame. The metal sang out with a high-pitched screech and was
accompanied by a shower of sparks every time it hit the Hestia
Knife and Ushiwakamaru with incredible force.
It moved so fast that Bell’s eyes couldn’t follow, only track the
afterimages in its wake.
Bell saw Hyacinthus smirk just before the man’s entire body
became a blur as he picked up speed.
Before his eyes could blink, the flamberge slashed from below.
His body’s reflexive retreat wasn’t fast enough this time. Bell’s
breastplate was sliced clean in half. The tip of the longsword met
flesh, carving its way through skin, muscle, and bone alike in one
long, graceful slice. Extreme pain shot through Bell like a wild-
fire.
—He was hit.
“Gah?!”
The elbow hit Bell square in the throat, making his body
flinch. He couldn’t even yell out in pain before the man’s fist
buried itself in his gut—and was followed up with a spinning kick.
Momentarily blinded by his opponent’s boot, the next thing Bell
saw was the sky as his back hit the stone pavement.
“B-Bel…?!”
Bell’s vision was blurry as he willed his upper body off the
ground. Tears welling up in his ruby-red eyes, he looked up at
Hyacinthus.
“Whuh?!”
The rouge blade flicked upward and was about to swing down
onto Bell’s shoulder when suddenly—
“What?”
He had dodged the sneak attack by the skin of his teeth. Bell
and Hestia were just as surprised by the sudden turn of events.
All three of them looked to find where they came from. In the
distance, a little ways off of West Main, was an old, run-down bell
tower. It was very faint, but there was the shadow of an archer
holding a longbow on top of the roof.
“Bell, run…”
As if her plea had been answered, Bell staggered to his feet just
as she was whispering to herself. The boy grabbed Hestia’s hand
and the two raced down another street. Hyacinthus started to
give chase but was cut off by Nahza’s next round.
The man looked straight at her, eyes burning with fury. She
fired yet another arrow, aiming straight for his chest. Without
missing a beat, the rouge longsword knocked the arrow harm-
lessly out of the air.
The dog person turned her attention to the other shadows pur-
suing Bell on the rooftops and proceeded to take them down one
by one. It was like dispatching individual bees in a swarm, with
no end to it.
She was firing so many arrows that she didn’t have enough
time to watch them hit their targets. Instead, she listened for the
distant yelps of pain and soft thuds as the hunters fell from the
rooftops.
A solitary bead of sweat worked its way down her anxious face.
“I-I’m f-fine…”
“?!”
“Magic?!”
Hestia noticed, too. Sure enough, there was an elf mage di-
rectly above them holding an outstretched staff.
“—?!!”
The hair on the back of his head singed, Bell hugged Hestia in
close as the two hit the street and rolled.
Bell did his best to shield Hestia from the blast, but the light-
ning magic carved its way into the surrounding buildings and
ground. Everything around them was instantly blown to pieces;
the air was inundated with smoke.
Bell’s and Hestia’s ears were ringing, vision hazy as many foot-
steps rushed in to surround them. The first figure to appear on
the other side of the thinning smoke was an elf wearing a scarf
that covered his mouth—the same one who had led the attack on
the church. This time he was accompanied by five more adventur-
ers.
Lissos, a rather handsome elf even by their standards, glared
at the two fugitives and said, “Chests to the ground, now.”
Bell rolled over to protect Hestia, his dirty face locked on the
elf—then, a new group appeared on the scene.
“Huh…?”
The two factions stared each other down. Apollo Familia and
Takemikazuchi Familia drew weapons and shouted battle cries
as they prepared for combat.
“M-Miach?!”
Both groups charged in, trying to land the first hit, when sud-
denly Miach emerged from the backstreet, trying to catch his
breath.
Hestia was first to notice his presence and raised her head to
greet him. The god looked down and nodded with a short “Ah.”
“Y-yes.”
The deities smiled at the look of surprise on Bell’s face and the
gratitude radiating from Hestia’s eyes.
“Wha…but—”
“Listen to me. This battle will not end until your safety can be
guaranteed. You must understand this.”
“Now, go!”
The two made it to the entrance of the closest back alley. Bell
took a quick look over his shoulder at Mikoto’s group, locked in
fierce combat. The fact that others were now involved in this
mess weighed heavily on his heart.
“That’s the city wall! They forced us all the way out here…?!”
“Over here!”
“…?!”
“?!”
A new black figure launched itself from one of the side streets,
colliding with the three hunters in midair. Holding a greatsword
in his left hand, the figure sent two of the hunters hurtling to the
ground with one sweep.
“Welf?!”
The young man rested the greatsword over his shoulder as the
two comrades made eye contact.
“Mr. Bell!”
Reloading the bow gun strapped to her right arm, Lilly called
out her friend’s name.
“Supporter, too…”
“Why…why are you here…?”
“We were worried about Mr. Bell and Lady Hestia, obviously!”
Bell uncorked a vial of dark blue liquid and did his best to
overcome the twinges of pain as he chugged it down.
Lilly asked the question as the four of them took off. Hestia
answered her right away.
Whether it was all true or just some elaborate prank, every-
thing that Bell knew was on the line. Lilly nearly tripped as that
information sank in.
“!”
Welf, who was leading the way, spotted more figures up ahead.
There were three in the front with a few more joining them from
behind.
Bell’s and Hestia’s faces tensed up, but it was Lilly who urged
them forward.
Bell and Hestia went down a different side street as Welf and
Lilly rushed to meet their enemies head-on.
The airborne hunters spun and flipped over Lilly’s head and
landed behind her.
Lilly hid just how thankful she was for Welf’s Level 2 and
yelled a stern warning instead.
Welf and Lilly fought back against a party of Level 1 and Level
2 adventurers. Welf quickly dispatched the weaker opponents as
Lilly drew the only upper-class adventurer’s attention away from
him with arrows from her bow gun.
Welf spun like a top as he got into position and landed a blow
that launched the upper-class adventurer straight into the wall
behind them.
Pinching their noses shut with one hand, the two argued as
they raced to escape the expanding putrid cloud.
Theirs was a net that relied solely on numbers. The two allies
came to a stop as a wave of hunters moved to cut them off…Welf
stared them down, tightening his grip on his sword. Lilly, how-
ever, froze in place.
Nausea overtook her; sweat coated her body. She shook her
head back and forth, mumbling, “That’s not possible, that’s not
possible…”
“?!”
Lilly came to the conclusion that the reason for the over-
whelming numbers was that another Familia had joined forces
with Apollo.
That’s when she spotted the thin man wearing glasses who was
barking orders to the other adventurers.
“Li’l E?!”
“Mr. Zanis?!”
The leader of Soma Familia didn’t seem the least bit surprised
when Lilly appeared before him, and he grinned at her.
The human man and prum girl stood face-to-face on the flat
rooftop of the house.
“They asked for it. Even forked over a large sum of money in
exchange for our promise to join their fight against Hestia Fa-
milia. Lord Soma gave his approval…Well, he left it up to me.”
Lilly yelled over and over that they had no reason to attack
Hestia Familia, that their actions didn’t make any sense.
“Justifi…cation?”
“—It can’t…be.”
They were using the fact that Lilly was still technically a mem-
ber of Soma Familia as an excuse to join the assault on Hestia
Familia. This fact protected them from the Guild as well as gave
them an escape route to avoid any penalties.
That was the true power of a contract with the Familia. If they
were able to prove that one of their members was still bound to
their god but working for the benefit of another, it would be next
to impossible to punish their actions. No matter how much Lilly
would try to explain the circumstances, the voice of the Familia
would win out.
Lilly was another reason that Bell and Hestia were in danger.
She always used her magic, Cinder Ella, to take the form of a
werewolf child while on the surface. However, she deactivated the
magic while in the Dungeon to preserve her mental strength.
Now, because of the events on the eighteenth floor, the group of
adventurers there that day not only knew her true appearance,
but also that she was in a party with Bell. What’s more, that infor-
mation was spreading.
Zanis must have acquired this information before receiving
the offer from Apollo Familia. Once money was offered, he seized
his opportunity.
“Do not fret, Erde. I will assure Lord Soma of your innocence
in this matter. Hestia Familia is completely in the wrong.”
She’d warned them. Lilly had warned Hestia and Bell that
Soma Familia would one day seek revenge. That day had arrived.
The flames had reached them…That was how Lilly felt. She’d
made a horrible mistake. Her past was a wildfire just waiting to
ignite. What’s more, she’d fanned the flames to the point of a rag-
ing inferno.
“The evil ones who tricked you, used you, and profited off you
shall receive a fitting punishment. Apollo Familia will crush them
into oblivion.”
Lilly felt dizzy, the rooftops spinning around her. Her whole
world was crashing down around her.
She opened her eyes and looked out over the battlefield.
Nahza had been chased from her perch on top of the bell
tower, Takemikazuchi Familia was pinned down on all sides a
few blocks away, and Welf continued to trade blows with the
hunters just below her. All of them were in danger right now be-
cause of Soma Familia.
Lilly should have never strayed anywhere near Bell and the
others.
—It was absurd to believe that her plague would never reach
them, that their warmth and generosity wouldn’t be destroyed by
the flames that followed her.
Eyes glistening with tears, Lilly’s neck gave out and her head
slammed into her chest.
“Please…”
“What?”
She raised her face to look at him. There was no life in her
eyes.
She knew it was highly unlikely he’d accept her offer, but she
had to try.
“Why not?”
Lilly was shocked at his sudden approval, and also a little sus-
picious.
Lilly’s eyes shot open. This new information caught her off
guard.
Zanis reached inside his jacket and withdrew a small flare gun.
Lilly did not respond, silently doing what she was told.
The man smiled with satisfaction, raised the flare gun to the
sky, and pulled the trigger. A ball of sparkling light instantly shot
high into the air.
With roughly half of his assailants leaving the area, Welf fi-
nally had enough time to call out to his ally from the street below.
Lilly took a step toward the edge of the roof and looked down
at him with listless eyes.
“Come, Erde.”
“Yes…”
“The hell are you saying?! I can’t look Bell in the eye and say
that! Get back here!”
“Lilly’s sorry…Farewell.”
Bell and Hestia had lost count of how many hits their bodies had
absorbed. The tally had just increased by yet another.
With all the hunters’ arrows, the spells of magic users, and up-
per-class adventurers wielding every weapon imaginable, neither
of them had time to catch their breath. For some reason, their
pursuers had been yelling at one another for a while now—Apollo
Familia was starting to get desperate and had ramped up their
assault.
“…Firebolt!”
The flaming lightning bolts ignited the debris inside the build-
ing, creating yet another explosion of smoke. Bell used it as cover
to escape the eyes of his pursuers and took off in a completely dif-
ferent direction.
“Ha-haa…!”
She found a drainage canal that ran beneath the street level.
Leaving the backstreet, they found the closest stairwell and raced
down to the water level. It wasn’t long until they reached the city
sewer’s entrance.
Bell leaned against the wall before sliding all the way down to
the ground and offered Hestia an apology. Hestia shook her head
before looking around to find their escape routes. They were be-
neath what could have been a very large bridge, open on both
ends with water flowing behind them. She guessed that the water
must be running deeper into the city. The street-level landscape
was visible at the other end.
Although they couldn’t see them, they could hear the yells and
hurried footsteps of their pursuers coming from just outside.
Praying with all their might that they remain hidden, the two
talked in hushed voices.
Bell used the last of the potions he’d received from Lilly in
order to recover from at least some of the damage he had taken.
Hestia watched his staggered breathing with remorseful eyes.
Without warning, a booming voice erupted from the other side of
the wall.
Hyacinthus’s voice.
Hestia sat shoulder to shoulder with Bell. The boy clenched his
eyes shut.
“Wherever you hide, wherever you run, we will find you! This
game of hide-and-seek is meaningless!”
Just as Hyacinthus said, the chase would not end until there
was a clear resolution. He would never be able to live a normal
life.
“…”
Hestia sat silently next to him. Bell was in shock from the real-
ization.
“…!”
Hestia ignored the look of shock on the boy’s face and contin-
ued. She knew the boy comprehended their situation.
She would miss the friends she had and the peaceful days
she’d spent living in the city. But as long as Bell was with her, she
didn’t care where they lived. That was clear as day.
Hestia held her hand to her chest, trying to steady her beating
heart as she waited on the edge of her seat for Bell’s response.
In truth, running away might be the only real option for Bell
and Hestia.
It was the same for the other Familias that came out on the
losing end of these battles…Just like Hermes had told him about
Zeus, leaving Orario was the only way.
But…!
His heart might have been swayed by Hestia’s words, but im-
ages of all the people he’d met in the city suddenly surged
through Bell’s mind.
People he’d laughed alongside. All the girls who had shared
smiles with him.
I—
The start of it all, meeting the knight with blond hair and
golden eyes.
The side of her face, blond locks flowing. His heart couldn’t
leave that behind.
“…”
Her lips tensed as she reached out and grabbed ahold of both
of the boy’s hands.
“Huh?!”
“This is important.”
“If you say you love me, I’m ready to do anything. If I believe
your words, all other petty emotions mean nothing and I can do
anything you ask! I can fight!”
“I love you very much, Bell! You’re just so cute, I can’t help it. I
want to live with you forever, always be by your side…I don’t want
anyone else to have you.”
Bell, too, had turned bright red. But he had no clue what the
goddess was trying to say.
“I-I revere you…”
Ka-booom!
“?!”
Bell quickly forced his body up to shield Hestia from the de-
bris. A moment later, the outlines of mages and adventurers ap-
peared in the cloud of smoke.
“After ’em!”
“?!”
Their pursuers had found their hiding spot. Bell jumped to his
feet with Hestia in his arms and took off once again.
The white-haired boy made a beeline for the exit on the oppo-
site side of the tunnel.
“Y-yes?!”
“Southwest—go southwest!”
Bell didn’t dare do anything else. Hestia had never barked or-
ders before.
“…”
“…”
Perhaps Hestia felt the same way. Rather than bring it back
up, she shoved her red face deep into his chest.
Bell could feel her shaking in his embrace, much like his own.
“We’re not here to take over, out of the way! Shoo! Shoo!”
Many sets of eyes watched the two fugitives make their way
through the center of the garden. All of them wore the same look
of anticipation. Creak! The joints on the front door sounded as
Apollo emerged.
Hestia’s aura of pure hatred made Bell and Luan uneasy, look-
ing anywhere but at the goddess. Their faces glistened with a cold
sweat. The two deities, on the other hand, didn’t even blink as
they faced each other.
“Eh…Um, sure.”
Hestia’s tone didn’t allow for dissent. Luan nodded and re-
moved the glove from his right hand.
““?!””
Hestia used every muscle in her body to deliver the blow; even
her twin black ponytails flew through the air as her arm finally
came to a stop. Bell and Ruan watched in stunned silence.
Doors and windows of the stone building flew open the mo-
ment Apollo raised his arms. Gods and goddesses emerged one
after another.
“YAAAAAAAHHHHHH!”
Bell, Luan, and all the members of Apollo Familia who were
on standby didn’t know how to react. They looked around with
wide eyes as the garden suddenly came alive with divine voices.
“This is so exciting—!”
“It’s settled, then. The finer details of our Game will be de-
cided at Denatus. The day shall be announced later…Let’s enjoy
this, Hestia?”
“G-Goddess…”
Bell watched the god ascend the stone steps, his body frozen in
place. Even his voice lacked substance.
“I will find a way to delay the War Game for one week.”
“Huh…?”
“Welf?!”
The young man had followed Bell’s pursuers and then heard
the commotion coming from this location to find them.
“Li’l E went back to…No, no, was taken back to Soma Fa-
milia.”
“?!”
“Bell, do as I say.”
“B-but–?!”
The goddess believed in her child; all she asked was that he
believe in her.
All of the emotions that raged through his mind just a moment
ago now at ease, he nodded.
“Here.”
“Yes!”
With that, Bell dashed from the noisy garden in front of Apollo
Familia’s home as fast as his feet could carry him.
The news that a War Game would be held spread like wildfire
among the gods.
The male guard took a look at the frantic boy’s face, his eye-
brows sinking lower and lower as he started to connect the dots.
“You, Little Rookie…? What’s the big idea, trying to meet with
her?!”
Bell’s white hair and red eyes must have tipped him off. The
guard immediately came to the defense of his ally, trying to pro-
tect her from this outsider. However, Bell couldn’t afford to back
down.
The boy asked the guards many times to let him see Aiz, but he
couldn’t explain himself. The guards’ voices grew steadily louder
and angrier as the boy’s pleas became more and more desperate.
It didn’t take long for other members of the Familia to make their
way outside.
“…!”
Fear consumed the boy’s body as he took a step back out of re-
flex.
The fact that Lilly had been kidnapped was still eating at him
inside. Instead of rushing to save her, he was standing out here
getting yelled at. Every moment he wasn’t making progress to
rescue her or getting stronger felt like an eternity.
“Let me see Aiz!” he pleaded with the mob again, bowing over
and over. Every muscle in his face was squeezed to its limit.
The mob quickly parted, allowing her to pass. She walked di-
rectly up to Bell.
One of the guards leaned close to whisper into her ear and ex-
plained everything that had happened so far. The Amazonian
girl’s eyes flashed at Bell.
“…?!”
Her tone was cold and her stare showed no willingness to lis-
ten. Bell cowered in her presence. She crossed her arms, aura un-
yielding and overwhelming. A moment later, she grabbed both of
Bell’s shoulders and pushed him away from the front entrance.
“—Turn right from here and go two blocks down that street.”
“!”
Tione ignored the look of shock on Bell’s face and gave him
one last shove into the street.
Her face might as well have been carved from stone, emotion-
less as she stared at him for a long moment before turning her
back. Bell watched her long black hair dance behind her, unable
to move or speak. The Amazonian girl walked swiftly back
through the mob and into the building.
Standing there to greet him were none other than the saber-
wielding Aiz and the other Amazonian girl, Tiona, with some kind
of large sheath resting over her shoulders.
“We saw you from the window, Argonaut. Some kind of magic-
stone lamp went off in Aiz’s head, and we asked Tione to meet
you.”
Aiz had figured out immediately what Bell was doing when he
appeared at their front door. The look in his eyes told her that the
boy wanted another round of training. However, they couldn’t
allow the mob to see her, so they sent Tione outside to deliver a
message.
Whether she wanted to help out her friend or she was just
along for the fun, Tiona was completely on board with the idea.
She had no reason to teach him anything, Bell was asking for a
huge favor. Since their Familias were not working together, she’d
be doing this on her own as well as face the consequences it might
bring.
Bell’s words hung in the air for a moment, tension rising. Fi-
nally, Aiz gave him her answer.
“Aiz…”
The look in the girl’s golden eyes made Bell’s heart melt. Com-
pletely ignoring the sudden change in mood, Tiona jumped back
into the conversation.
“But for me, Apollo Familia is going about this all wrong. Way
over-the-top, dirty, I just can’t stand it…”
“Yes.”
Bell swore to himself right then and there that he would find
some way to repay them for their kindness. He was in their debt.
The Guild officially approved the War Game between Hestia and
Apollo almost immediately.
Apollo angrily paced around his chair, insisting that she was
concocting an escape plan. The moment he finished his rant, the
doors to the tall chamber swung open.
Although her words were polite, she didn’t sound the least bit
sorry. Miach strode in beside her.
“It’s not my fault I got a fever after being chased around the
city by your followers. For a while there, I thought I was a goner.”
Loki was leaning back in her chair, one eyebrow raised and
hands behind her head as if she were out of patience as well. All
of the deities returned to their seats and the discussion finally got
under way.
The first order of business was for Hestia and Apollo to sign
the necessary paperwork with everyone present as witnesses.
“Once I’m victorious, I claim Bell Cranell.”
“…”
Next up, they needed to decide how the War Game would be
fought.
“It could be held at the Coliseum for everyone to see. The final
battle right in front of our eyes. How could anyone not be enter-
tained?”
Apollo’s hostile gaze first fell on Hestia and then to her allies,
Miach and Takemikazuchi.
Quite a few heads around the table started to nod, seeing the
logic in her reasoning.
“What say you, Apollo?” “That’s the Ox Killer you’re fighting!”
“…”
“The only reason that your Familia isn’t larger is entirely due
to your laziness, Hestia, when it comes to recruiting.”
“Muh…”
“You can cry all you want about your lack of children, but
that’s no reason for me to have to accommodate.”
It was true that Hestia wanted to always be alone with Bell and
had never tried to increase the size of her Familia.
““Hermes””
“Ehhh…Seriously?”
“Please be gentle…”
Hermes whispered to himself as he slowly lowered his hand
into the box.
“Castle Siege.”
—Slam! Hestia drove both of her fists onto the table, teeth
clenched.
“…”
“Freya…”
“So then, you don’t trust your children? Is that the extent of
your love for them?”
The deity with the power to control love itself took a shot at
the pride of the god who loves too passionately. Apollo’s jaws
clenched together, strong enough to make them cry out under the
pressure. Sure enough, a large group of male deities sided with
Freya and voted to allow the addition of outsiders. The Denatus
instantly shook with fervor.
“We can’t be usin’ just any old castle, so let’s get the Guild in
on this. We can work out the date then, too. Shall we call it a
day?”
Hestia could do nothing but glare back at him. She let out a
long sigh as soon as he was out of sight. Soon, only Miach,
Takemikazuchi, and other friends of hers remained in the cham-
ber.
Hermes was the first to approach Hestia and offered his own
apology. She shook her head no. No matter how much she didn’t
like it, the decision had been reached using a fair draw. It was a
miracle that an outsider would be allowed to participate. It was
all thanks to the fact that the gods and goddesses were thirsty for
a good show, and Freya, that her side was given some favoritism
during the meeting.
“So tell me, Hermes, did you find out where our supporter is
being held?”
“In fact, I did. That is to say, Asfi did. It looks like little Lilly
was taken to Soma’s storage facility.”
“That’s right. Soma bought a big building just for storing his
wine. Guess his home wasn’t big enough.”
“…”
A dirty magic-stone lamp cast faint light onto the stone walls.
She lay on her stomach, hands tied behind her back. Ignoring
the aches and pains in her body, the prum girl lifted her head to
look around. Nothing had changed in her dark prison cell since
she was first brought here. Locked in a cage, she couldn’t help but
feel that she was a sorry sight to see.
This floor was designed to hold the Familia members who had
violated the rules or gotten a little bit too drunk off the divine
wine. She was bound with a metallic wire strong enough to keep
lower-class adventurers restrained indefinitely. Several of these
compartments were used to store tools as well as serve as a
makeshift jail inside the complex. Lilly was being treated as a
prisoner as a punishment for the extended length of time she’d
spent away from the Familia.
Having lost all sense of time, Lilly had no idea how many days
had passed since the battle in the streets.
Lilly wiggled her body into the corner of her cell where a small
dish of water had been mercifully left for her. Lifting her head off
the floor, she put her lips into the liquid.
The days that she’d spent with Bell were special, but now she’d
live her life by slurping the dirty water she was given.
The stone floor was cold and damp. Her body shivered as she
drank.
“…”
Lilly willed her body off the floor and into a sitting position.
Sure enough, a long shadow was growing on the other side of the
bars. Zanis’s shadow.
“How are you feeling, Erde?”
“…Horrible.”
The man looked down at her through the bars as Lilly practi-
cally spat her answer at his feet.
“Sorry about this. You see, the past three days have been very
busy, collecting information and whatnot. I haven’t had time to
step away until now. Forgive me.”
“…Mr. Bell is still okay? Mr. Zanis really hasn’t done anything
to him?”
She asked in the most serious, dry voice she could muster.
She knew he’d said that he needed her when the man took her
away. She clearly remembered that moment.
Just like Kanu, the man who had left her for dead, Zanis often
took money from her. Never once had he offered a helping hand.
She believed him to be a man who saw her only as an insect that
occasionally had vals worth taking.
“No, no, I have a use for you. I realized that you were saving
up a great deal of money in secret. I believe that anyone with fin-
gers as sticky as yours deserves to be recognized for their talents.
Lilly’s eyes shot open at the mention of her magic, Cinder Ella.
With the exception of Bell, Welf, and Hestia, she had never
told the secret to anyone. “Lord Soma told me,” said Zanis in re-
sponse to the look of surprise on her face. Soma was the one
who’d found that Magic in her excelia and enabled her to use it.
Of course he would have known.
Lilly thought about the time frame and came to the conclusion
that Zanis probably knew about her Magic before she’d feigned
her death.
“Is that the reason you brought Lilly back, back into Soma Fa-
milia…The reason you got involved in the attack on Bell?”
BAM! Zanis slammed his boot into one of the iron bars.
The avarice in his voice was far beyond anything Lilly had ever
heard before—much more hideous than those under the influence
of the Divine Wine, soma.
“Oops.”
Zanis tried to cover half of his malicious smile with his hand.
Taking his boot out of the bent iron bar, the man straightened his
posture and continued on, business as usual.
“…?”
Even the thick stone walls of this prison couldn’t keep out the
piercing resonance ringing out upstairs.
“Chandra! Where are you?! Tell me what the hell is going on!”
Zanis yelled at the top of his lungs down the hall toward the
staircase to the surface.
The hallway was still for a moment as the man’s voice faded
into nothingness. A few heartbeats later, a very annoyed-looking
dwarf appeared at the base of the stairwell.
“You could go have a look fer yourself…or are those feet of yers
fer decoration?”
“Is that so? In that case—we need to exterminate the pests. I’ll
take command.”
“She came to attack us. It’s not my fault if she gets burned by
her own flame.”
“Lilly will convince her to leave! Please, let Lilly talk to her…!”
Zanis’s claim that he needed to protect her was the final straw.
Lilly’s fury ignited.
“How unfortunate…”
Zanis closed his eyes and calmly walked up to the iron bars.
“—”
Lilly froze.
Not too long ago, one sip of the concoction was enough to
make Lilly covet it more than life itself.
“!”
Not caring if her skull cracked, Lilly whipped her head forward
in an attempt to inflict any amount of pain possible on Zanis.
Dunnnn. But the iron bars got in the way. The sound reverber-
ated throughout the cell as her head bounced off. The man just
smiled as he watched a trickle of blood work its way down the
girl’s face, thoroughly enjoying every second of the hatred ema-
nating from the girl’s eyes.
“Humph…”
The dwarf didn’t respond to his leader’s order, only turned his
back on the prison cell and sat down. Zanis only shrugged in re-
sponse before disappearing from Lilly’s line of sight.
She wanted to yell out, get him to come back, but no words
would come out of her shaking throat. The man had been plan-
ning on breaking his promise and even intended to turn her into
nothing more than his drunken pet from the start.
Dammit all! Lilly gritted her teeth and decided that now was
the time to break out of her cell.
The only reason for her to stay was gone. She had to help Lady
Hestia and the others escape.
“…!”
She worked her way into Chandra’s blind spot and began to
vigorously pull at her bindings.
But the dwarf just sat there, taking swigs of wine from the cal-
abash strapped to his back. The wires dug deeper and deeper into
her wrists as she fought. She called upon every trick she’d learned
as a thief—including how to quietly trigger her magic. The claws
of a werewolf grew on her fingers, allowing her to loosen the grip
of the wires just enough to get her hands free.
However, she kept her hands behind her back to hide the fact
that she was loose. Now all that was left was figuring out how to
escape without the guard noticing.
Lilly’s mind kicked into high gear as she tried to find a way to
get out of the cell without drawing Chandra’s attention.
The loathing in his voice was more intense than the sounds of
battle raining down from upstairs.
“I came ta this city ’cause I heard I could drink the most fillin’,
most delicious wine around. That’s how I found this Familia. But
now it’s nothin’ more than that man’s toy. No amount of our
god’s wine can satisfy me.”
“Got a feelin’ you hate him just as much as I do. So, I’m lookin’
the other way.”
Being restrained and locked up for three days had taken its toll
on her body. Tripping over her feet several times, Lilly ascended
the stairwell to the surface as fast as she could.
“…?!”
She emerged at the end of another long stone hallway, but the
sounds of battle were coming from the other side of the wall.
The window was slightly higher than her head and barred off
just like her cell was belowground. She jumped off the ground,
grabbed the bars, and stuck her head between them.
Despite her very restricted view of the battle, Lilly saw many
familiar faces engaging Soma Familia in combat.
The inner courtyard was wide and littered with piles of boxes,
some of which stretched all the way up to the roof. However, the
area was absolutely flooded with enemies. Welf and Ouka pro-
tected the front lines, Mikoto providing them with blind-side pro-
tection. Nahza and Chigusa supported them from a slight dis-
tance. Their whole group had been forced into the corner of the
courtyard by the seemingly endless onslaught of Soma Familia.
Lilly’s face turned blue as she used every bit of air in her lungs,
pleading with them.
There was only one reason why these kind people had come so
deep into enemy territory: her. All the damage they took, every
injury they sustained was her fault.
She yelled with all of her might in hopes that the battle would
stop. It just so happened that Hestia was holding her head in both
hands behind a storage box near the same window and heard
Lilly’s cries.
“Miss Supporter?!”
“Lady Hestia!”
Nahza was using one stack of boxes as cover; Hestia had been
even farther behind her. Keeping her head low, Hestia went to
Lilly’s window.
“I can’t do that! I’m not leaving this place until you come with
us!”
“WHY?! Lilly won’t cause any more trouble! Lady Hestia won’t
get dragged into any more bad situations without Lilly! So
please…!”
The two young ladies argued back and forth, stay or go,
through the iron bars of the window until Hestia screamed back:
“?!”
Lilly was lost for words as she heard Hestia’s blitz of an expla-
nation.
“Eh…”
“Right now, that boy is going through hell to prepare for the
War Game! But it won’t be enough! We need you! It’s hopeless
unless you’re with us!”
She didn’t believe her. Lilly always held other people back—
how could she possibly be the key to victory?
She had never been needed before, and yet this goddess said
she was.
That boy was the only one who ever helped her, who ever said
that she was needed—now it was time to help him.
She ran.
She ran as if shot out of a cannon.
But…!
No one had ever wanted her before, no one had needed her.
But now, there was.
“Wah…!”
Her vision blurred, head feverish. Her chest felt so tight that
her ribs might strangle her lungs.
With Zanis at the helm, there was only one way to stop this
battle: appeal to the only person with more authority in the Fa-
milia than its leader, the god Soma. Lilly desperately searched
through her memories of the day she was brought here and re-
membered seeing the deity in the building. He was also her only
hope for being released from her contract with the Familia. She
had to persuade Soma.
She used her memories to piece together a small map of the fa-
cility. There was an observation tower that overlooked the en-
trance to the underground holding cells. She was almost certain
that the highest room of this tower belonged to Soma himself.
That’s where she’d find him.
Leaving clear tears in her wake, Lilly rushed to find the stair-
well that would lead to her god.
Zanis watched the battle in the courtyard unfold from the roof
of the storage facility.
“…?”
“?!”
A voice came from behind Lilly as she ran down the open cor-
ridor. CRASH! A window out of her line of sight was destroyed.
“?!”
Lilly suddenly felt a pressure from behind her before she was
tapped on the shoulder.
The palm of Zanis’s hand was all it took to send the girl crash-
ing to the floor.
A moment later, the man’s boot plowed straight into her ribs.
“Agh!”
“Don’t tell me, you’re going to try to meet with Lord Soma?
Pointless! Absolutely pointless!”
His kick sent her face-first toward the wall. Fighting to find
her balance, Lilly kept moving forward.
Her thin legs reached their limit and Lilly had to thrust her
hand out to the wall to catch herself.
“What makes you think that he’ll listen to you? The only thing
our god cares about is his wine!”
“Ighhh…!”
All the while he would jubilantly remark about how all her ef-
fort was for nothing.
In her darkest days, she had tried many times to escape the
abyss only to have her connection to Soma Familia drag her right
back in. The shell of a man who was Zanis sneered at Lilly.
There were only a few walls on this floor, making one large
room with one area portioned off—Soma’s private room. Lilly
channeled all the strength she had left into her legs and made a
break for it.
“Three, two…WHAM!”
“AGUHH!”
However, his kick sent her hurtling toward the door to the pri-
vate chamber. Lilly folded her arms across her chest and used
that momentum to break it open.
“…”
The deity kept his back to her as Lilly tried to peel her injury-
ridden body off the stone floor.
Looking even more perturbed, Soma shifted his gaze down to-
ward Lilly.
The girl managed to force her aching body into a kneeling po-
sition.
“I beg you, Lord Soma. Please bring an end to the battle taking
place outside—please save Lady Hestia and those fighting along-
side her! Please, please…!”
“—”
Lilly fell silent after hearing Soma’s monotone words. A cold
chill swept through her veins.
But it was the look in his eyes that did it, made Lilly realize the
truth.
From the god Soma’s point of view, all he did was reward them
with delicious wine for their services. But rather than thank him,
they turned on one another for more drunken pleasure. He had
become disillusioned by their primitive reaction to his more re-
fined methods.
Lilly remained still, unable to find any words in the face of her
god’s cold stare. It was Soma who moved first.
He took a bottle of white wine off one of the shelves built into
the wall of his chamber.
“If you can say the same thing after drinking this, I’ll listen.”
The deity poured the wine into the glass, its cool yet sweet
aroma filling the room. He held the glass out to her. Lilly looked
at her own reflection on the surface of the white liquid.
Divine Wine.
Her throat clenched. Sweat poured down her face. The glass
nearly slipped from her grasp as she tried to take it with both
hands.
Memories of the dark days when she was under the influence
of soma’s power rampaged through her mind. She looked back up
at Soma, shoulders shaking in fright. The god’s face was void of
emotion as he watched her from behind his bangs.
“Ah, aah…!”
Her breaths very shallow and staggered, she took another look
at the glass in her hands.
Lilly brought the glass to her lips, hands shaking and palms
clammy.
This wine had once turned Lilly into little more than a mon-
ster.
It had stolen her life from her, caused all of her problems.
Under the watchful eyes of Soma and Zanis, Lilly willed her
mouth open and drank it down.
“—”
Tink! The glass fell out of her hands, hit the floor, and rolled
away.
Her arms and legs quivered. She couldn’t keep standing and
fell to her knees like a puppet whose strings had just been cut.
Acute warmth filled her cheeks as her eyes went out of focus…
Lilly giggled.
“—a…haa.”
Soma watched the girl’s spirit disappear and turned his back
to her without a second thought. Lilly’s ears stopped picking up
the sounds around her, with only one exception: Zanis’s blood-
curdling laughter.
Then, just as the white was about to embrace her, she saw
something.
“—”
But amid all the white around her, she saw how the boy smiled
when he saved her that day.
“…”
The warmth of the boy’s smile had awakened her heart, filled
her with new emotion, and caused a tear to be shed.
Not much sound escaped her lips, but it was enough to stop
Soma in his tracks.
His long bangs swung out of the way, revealing his black eyes.
Lilly’s trembling figure reflected within them.
“Wha…”
She didn’t know if that sound came from Soma or from Zanis.
It didn’t matter that her Status was low, that her body was
weak. She defeated soma with sheer willpower.
Bonds with her allies had been forged in the fire, and she was
a Phoenix emerging from the flame, guided by them.
“Lilly knows, even without any gods telling her, Lilly knows
that she was born for this moment!”
Even if she died and was reborn many times, even in the deep-
est pits of hell…
The warmth of the hands that reached out for her, the kind-
ness of his embrace.
She’d never forget the smile of the one who rescued her.
The image that had been seared into her very soul would never
fade.
She had not forgotten all of the mistakes she made and the
gray areas of her past. Those memories gave her the strength to
keep shouting.
Gods did not grow or feel distress of any kind. It was hard to
comprehend what just unfolded.
Seeing a person of Gekai change right before his eyes for the
first time left Soma speechless.
“No way…?!”
“Quiet, Zanis.”
The empty wine bottle still in his hand, Soma stepped out onto
the balcony. He could see the battle raging in the courtyard be-
neath him. Standing next to the railing, he raised the bottle high
above his head and threw it into the courtyard.
Spinning end over end, the bottle sent flares of sunlight flash-
ing all over the battle before crashing into the middle of it.
The shattering sound made all members of Soma Familia
come to a halt.
“Stop fighting.”
The man had only seen her as possible profit; he captured her
out of greed. His avarice made him torment her and now she was
too physically weak to run away or defend herself. She was the
reason why his perfect world had come crumbling down. With-
drawing a rapier from the hilt on his belt, he smiled to himself,
believing that she should be punished for what she had done to
him. He reached out with his left hand.
“?!”
Zanis barely managed to avoid the attack that came from out-
side the window.
The arrow buried itself in the wall behind him, making a small
web of cracks in the stone. Zanis looked back outside in shock.
Zanis heard the voice of a young man and saw a flash of gold
as the Chienthrope took a new arrow from him and promptly slid
it over her bow. She pulled this new golden arrow back, took aim,
and fired in one swift motion. But she wasn’t targeting Zanis. The
arrow plunged deep into the stone wall next to the balcony.
The red-haired man kept his balance, pulling off some very ac-
robatic moves as he raced across the wire bridge connecting the
two towers. The wire held firm under his weight. Sword balanced
against his shoulder, Welf quickly reached the balcony, jumped
over the silent Soma’s head, and landed just in front of the win-
dow.
“Mr. Welf…”
“I’ve come to collect this one. I’ve got a partner who is waiting
for her.”
Welf held his ground, using his sword like a highly mobile
shield despite its weight.
Welf’s back, shoulders, and arms all flared to life at the same
moment.
“—”
Lilly heard Welf’s black jacket swish as the man closed the dis-
tance between him and his unnaturally rigid opponent.
Welf had flipped his hold on the weapon so that the blunt edge
was facing his enemy.
With that said, Welf drove the entire blade forward in a rising
arc aimed right for his opponent’s head.
“GHEEEEE—!”
The blow struck Zanis with such precision that it split his
glasses right down the middle before launching him backward.
Momentum carried his body straight into the wall, the man’s
scream of pain cut short by the impact.
Zanis fell to the stone floor like a bag of potatoes. The blunt
edge of Welf’s greatsword left a thick red line down the center of
the motionless man’s face. What was left of his glasses lay on the
floor beside him.
“That should do it,” said Welf as he returned the blade into its
sheath at his shoulder and looked down at the white eyes of his
unconscious foe.
“He was stealin’ soma, usin’ it for his own profit. Deserves
some time in the slammer.”
“I’ll make sure ya get no trouble. It’s all up to our god after
that…Maybe now our voices will reach ’im.”
The god himself was still out on the balcony, assessing the
damage to his chamber—but his gaze always came back to Lilly.
“Lady Hestia…”
Truly grateful to Lilly for all of her hard work, the two made
eye contact for a moment before Hestia walked over to talk with
Soma.
Lilly gasped when she saw the goddess hold out the Hestia
Knife and hand it to Soma.
“…”
“But if we win, I’ll buy it back from you with our reward
money…I’ll make Apollo pay for it in full. Once you have the
money, I’ll take my knife back.”
She explained that should Hestia Familia win the War Game,
she was planning to take a large sum of money from Apollo. Soma
held the weapon in his hands, running his thumb down the
Ἥφαιστος logo engraved into its sheath. He looked up at her.
Hestia, Soma, and Lilly went to the second floor of the main
tower, leaving everyone else behind.
Lilly sat on a chair, pulled off her shirt, and exposed the Status
on her back. Soma made a small cut on his finger and ran it
across the hieroglyphs, the ichor in his blood making the mark-
ings glow.
Now it was Hestia’s turn. Pricking her finger, she added her
own ichor to the mix, gradually erasing several hieroglyphs as
their color faded. The markings indicating Soma’s contract disap-
peared from sight as Hestia’s name and symbols engraved them-
selves above Lilly’s name at the top of her Status.
Conversion.
A ring of light worked its way around the girl’s Status, making
it look like an epitaph in the dimly lit room. The markings for
Hestia Familia shined brightly at the top.
From this moment onward, Lilly was now one of Hestia’s fol-
lowers.
Lilly’s nerves had settled down considerably now that the cere-
mony was complete and she was fully dressed. However, the col-
lateral made her uneasy. Despite that, Hestia puffed out her chest
and said everything would take care of itself.
“Y-yes…”
Lilly’s eyes kept jumping from one deity to the other. Hestia
placed both hands on the girl’s shoulders and guided her out the
door.
“…Hest…ia?”
Hestia closed the door behind Lilly and turned to face the god
she was meeting for the first time. Soma wasn’t even sure how to
pronounce her name.
Even now, he remembered the strong look in her eyes. And yet
Soma had no memory of her. Hestia was the only one he could
ask.
The blue in her eyes became intense orbs in the dark as Soma
was unable to respond to her accusations.
“You should think long and hard about why she changed, the
meaning behind it.”
Hestia and Lilly rejoined the others at the base of the main tower
and exited Soma Familia’s wine storage facility.
“But, Lady Hestia, Lilly doesn’t understand how she can make
a difference in the War Game by herself…”
“Not quite.”
All they had done was increase Lilly’s confusion. She tilted her
head in their direction and Miach smiled back at her. Feeling an-
other gaze on her, Lilly looked the other way to see Mikoto with a
very determined look in her eyes.
Welf peeled away from the group and went down the right
path. Ouka, Mikoto, and Chigusa led their group down the road
to the left.
Miach, Nahza, and Lilly watched them leave from the center of
the intersection when a sudden breeze swept through the back-
street.
Hestia held her black hair out of her eyes with her right hand.
She looked up at the blue sky, where the wind was blowing in a
new direction.
“Hmmm—gahhh…”
Takemikazuchi groaned.
He was pacing back and forth inside his own room in an old
building designed to house multiple families, built on the side of
a narrow street. The god lived alongside his six-member Familia;
this building was their home. Arms folded in front of his chest, he
wore a troubled expression.
“It’s impossible for Miach. He only has one and his Familia
will collapse should she leave…”
“Even among my own children, the only two who could com-
pete with Apollo’s children are Ouka and Mikoto. Chigusa and the
others would only weigh them down…”
“I’ll just have to find some way to convince her…After all, I’m
the one who wants to help Hestia…But wait, if I did that…
Ghaaaaaa…!” Takemikazuchi stopped in the middle of the room
and scratched his head with both hands as he groaned at the ceil-
ing.
Forcing an air of calm, the deity closed his mouth and looked
upon his follower. She, too, wore a distressed expression similar
to his own.
Her silky black hair was tied back in its usual style. However,
she carried herself without her normal level of confidence, shoul-
ders uncharacteristically drooping. Even her violet-colored eyes
were trembling as she met his gaze.
“—Mi-Mikoto.”
“—Lord Takemikazuchi!”
She took a deep breath and made eye contact with her god.
“Wh-what?”
She didn’t look up, only raised her voice to be heard clearly de-
spite speaking directly into the floor.
He had been with her for so long and yet he had failed to an-
ticipate how she would react to the situation. It was shameful.
“But it will pass. Learn as much as you can from Hestia’s chil-
dren and come back stronger than ever.”
“—Yes, sir!”
Lastly, she gave him her Familia emblem for him to hold on to
until she returned.
There was a story behind its maker. A rather difficult child, his
skills had been rather unpolished at the time he forged this dag-
ger, but passion for his craft alone gave him incredible potential—
that “passion” could be felt by anyone who used the blade.
Hephaistos herself could feel it coursing through her when
there came a knock at her door.
“Enter.”
She opened one of the desk drawers at her side, returned the
blade to its sheath, and placed it inside.
“What is it?”
“And what makes you think I would allow such a selfish deci-
sion?”
Even apart from her, he would work to spread his name and
reach a higher plateau.
“Friendship.”
“Then I accept.”
She selected one that was the same crimson color as her hair
and eyes, and picked it up.
“S-sorry, Lyu…”
There were only a few days left before the War Game. Hermes
had lobbied to allow outside involvement for just this reason, to
request her help.
“Don’t worry about that. I’ll convince everyone that you came
from someplace on the other side of the mountains before the
fight begins. No one will believe you’re a waitress at a bar once
I’m through with them.”
The room itself had very little decoration. Lyu walked a few
paces to the corner and grabbed a knapsack along with a wooden
sword.
“I’ll handle the paperwork with the Guild. It’d make it a lot
easier to jump through the hoops if I had your Familia’s emblem.
Do you still have it?”
Hermes and Syr saw her out of the building and watched as
she disappeared into the night.
The boy’s long shadow passed over the stone surface, slam-
ming into the girl’s shadow over and over. Each time he was
thrown backward and each time he charged again.
Their brutal training was taking place on top of the city wall
around Orario.
Bell had his eyes focused on the cuts crisscrossing his arm
when suddenly—whoosh! A saber came at them from his blind
spot without warning. His instantaneous reflexes brought his
weapon into the path of the oncoming blade, deflecting it before
he jumped backward.
Bell and Aiz turned to face the owner of the cheerful voice.
“Thanks, Tiona…”
“Sure thing! Ah, Argonaut, these blades work okay for you? I
bought about five of them.”
Tiona had been supplying the two of them with food and items
for the past five days. It was thanks to her that Bell and Aiz could
focus solely on training.
“Well, I heard quite a bit around town. First off, the War Game
is four days from now.”
“Four days…”
Her update complete, Bell looked out over the guardrail and
across the beautiful cityscape.
The five days of training plus two more would make one week.
Bell said a quick thank-you to his goddess, who had managed to
deliver on her promise.
“Also, you’ll never guess what was posted on the Guild’s bul-
letin board. Hestia Familia has some new members.”
“Eh?!”
Bell fought to contain his surprise and delight until Tiona was
finished talking. The two girls watched as his face lit up and tears
of happiness rolled down his face.
Hestia had saved Lilly, plus Welf and Mikoto were coming to
help him. He didn’t need to know the details because he already
understood. The black void that had been eating away at him fi-
nally lifted, a new warmth flooding his soul.
Bell stretched out his arms. He looked at Aiz and Tiona with
renewed strength and willpower, feeling stronger than ever.
“Yes…”
The two girls went on the offensive beneath the red sky.
Jumping back to avoid the first and to his right to dodge the
second, the boy managed to get clear. However, Tiona charged
forward even though her weapons weren’t poised to strike.
“Geh?!”
“Try not to use potions. If you take one after every hit, you’ll
run out really quick. Better to kick the habit.”
“I-I’ll try…”
“My turn.”
“?!”
The session started back up. Bell was forced to use both knives
in order to repel Aiz’s direct attack.
Not only that, Tiona circled around to his blind side and con-
tinued her assault. Two of the greatest sword wielders in Orario
weren’t holding back any techniques on top of the city wall. Bell
desperately intercepted each strike, deflecting the blades out of
his ever-changing path. However, he hadn’t come here to learn
how to defend. He had to find a window for counterattack.
“!”
Taking aim for her ribs, Bell took a quick step forward and
thrust the dagger in his left hand toward his opponent.
“Hm.”
“—”
But Aiz spun her body around like a top, armor a blur.
“BuuHA?!”
“You dove for the opening…” said Aiz as Bell landed flat on his
chest on top of the stone floor.
Only then did Bell realize it was a trap. She had baited and set
it for the rabbit as though to demonstrate the prowess of a skilled
hunter. Bell’s head hit the stone surface in disappointment.
The boy pushed off the stone floor into a sitting position. Aiz
crouched down in front of him and continued her lesson.
“Y-yes.”
Unlike monsters that used their full power all the time, people
used techniques and experience to gain the upper hand in a fight.
This was especially true of the combatants of similar strength and
skill.
“…!”
Bell looked up, making eye contact with Aiz as she finished her
impassioned explanation.
Aiz held out her hand. Bell nodded and took it.
“Yeah…”
“Yes!”
The city of Orario might appear calm on the surface, but ex-
citement was building underneath its placid exterior.
The War Game was fast approaching. With each passing day,
the average citizens of the city discussed it on the streets, at their
workplaces, and over a jug of ale at their favorite bar. The num-
ber of adventurers going into the Dungeon fell dramatically, forc-
ing disappointed shops to close early. No one seemed to want to
do anything else. Even the children seemed to sense that some-
thing was different. Many of them gathered in city parks wielding
toy swords and staging their own games.
The white tower in the middle of it all looked over the city as
magic-stone lamps gradually lit up its surroundings.
While Freya heard the words of her follower, Ottar, she didn’t
respond in the slightest.
“…Fu-fu.”
Her silver eyes were being drawn to a fierce battle taking place
atop the city wall.
She felt no pity for the boy whenever he was launched into the
air by the Amazonian girl or cut down by the long-haired human.
This was because every time the boy got up, his soul shone
brighter. It was as if this training ground was a forge and the girls
were eliminating all impurities, like a smith prepping metal. They
were drawing out his soul’s clear glow.
It was that glow that originally drew Freya to him and would
hold her interest until the end of time. Every hit the boy took
added a new sparkle. The goddess sat there, completely trans-
fixed.
Ottar tried once again to draw her attention away from the city
wall.
Her eyes stayed put, but she used one thin finger to pull a lock
of her silver hair behind her ear and grinned.
Her cheeks pulled back into a full smile as she looked down
from her spot among the stars.
Even at this late hour, the Guild headquarters was alive with
activity. Clerks holding stacks of papers, receptionists carrying
boxes upon boxes, and employees with no time to sit down were
busily working in every corner of the Pantheon decorated with
white pillars.
With the War Game only four days away, there was enough
work to be done to make their eyes spin.
Her head drooped as she brought her hand to her chest. One
of the adventurers assigned to her, practically a little brother at
this point, was caught up in a battle between Familias. And now
he’d been forced into a War Game in which it wasn’t uncommon
for participants to die. Needles pierced her heart just by visualiz-
ing the boy’s innocent smile—would she never see it again?
Misha could tell that her friend was upset and tried to cheer
her up.
“Root…?”
“Yep. ‘Go for it!’ and stuff like that? I’m sure that if he had
your support, he’d do the best he could to win, right?”
If his only goal was to steal Bell away from Hestia, it would’ve
been easy enough to continue their assault and capture him even
without the cooperation of Soma Familia. If he had done so, the
boy would already be his.
—Ahh, Bell!
—No, my Belly-boy!
He could see the boy now, a tear in his eye. But something else
was swelling up within him. This heat surging through his chest
was proof of his love. Apollo’s craving for the boy was on the
verge of driving him insane. His thin, compact build and rabbit-
like features with white hair and young, red eyes that were un-
tainted by the truths of this world—everything.
“…If our love is to grow, Hestia, you will only get in the way.
Once he is mine, I will drive you out of this city—no, out of Gekai
entirely.”
Click. A few moments later, both hands of his clock joined him
in looking skyward.
The city was filled with a morning chill just before sunrise.
The streets were lined with silent and motionless shops. Shut-
ters were closed over windows and doors; it was unbelievable
how lifeless the city seemed. The city wall cast a tall shadow over
the buildings, the streets covered in shade.
Two figures ran quickly through East Main Street toward the
brightening horizon through the unnaturally quiet morning air.
Hestia and Bell ran through what was left of the morning fog.
Their destination was the East Gate. They kept talking as they
ran.
“Will do!”
Bell had finished training with Aiz and Tiona and had received
a Status update from Hestia. Now all that was left was to travel to
the battlefield. It would take a day to get there, so arrangements
had been made for Bell to travel with the caravan of merchants
for most of the trip.
Orario was set up so that it was relatively easy to enter the city
but extraordinarily difficult to exit. An individual needed several
documents approved by the Guild before they were allowed to
pass. Bell took the signed sheets of paper identifying him as a
War Game participant from Hestia and said a quick “Thank you.”
That’s when Hestia jumped onto his chest, wrapped her arms
around him, and squeezed with all her might. Bell’s body tensed
out of embarrassment, but he didn’t try to escape. He couldn’t.
Hestia ignored all the commotion around them and enjoyed the
warmth emanating from his chest as long as she could. Bell’s face
turned beet red as her arms worked higher, going above his
shoulders and around his neck as she started to pull back. Meet-
ing his gaze, she opened her mouth into a bright, gentle smile as
she said, “Now go.”
Bell took a step back, a shy smile on his face. Wiping his hot
cheeks with his free hand, the boy turned and ran to the front of
the caravan. “Wait for me!” he yelled to the front and took off into
the maze of carts. The caravan leader was talking with one of the
gatekeepers. Both looked up as the boy approached, holding out
his paperwork for them to see.
The horse-drawn cart that Bell climbed into was more spa-
cious than he thought. It had a roof as well as windows on each
side. A few people—some travelers, merchants, and a hired guard
—were already on board. Each of them had a very distinct look
about him or her, a few in light armor and others in comfortable
clothes.
“…Hey, you there. Aren’t you the Little Rookie from Hestia
Familia?”
“Thought so! On your way to the War Game, huh? Give ’em
hell!”
Bell took a seat at the back corner of the cart next to a rather
friendly animal person who immediately recognized him and
started a conversation. The smiling young man had the aura of a
drifter and a bushy tail wagging cheerfully behind him. The ten-
sion in the cart dissipated as the other passengers came over to
break the ice.
“Those guys are rough, but give it your best shot!” “This is our
tradition, we have some snacks before every trip!” “How ’bout
this?!”
The cries of many horses cut through the morning air. The
East Gate was open; the caravan started to move.
Bell felt every bump in the road through his wooden seat when
suddenly—
“—Bell!”
He leaned over to look out the window and saw Syr running
right beside the cart.
She was out of uniform, wearing a cape over her usual clothes
and running as hard as she could to keep up with the cart. She
thrust her right hand toward the window.
“Take this…!”
“Huh?”
The cart picked up speed and Syr couldn’t stay beside it, al-
most tripping a few times.
The girl’s cheeks blushed a light pink. Bell couldn’t help but
smile.
He leaned out the window and waved good-bye as she fell far-
ther and farther behind. She came to a stop, put her hands to-
gether in front of her chest, and watched the cart disappear
through the East Gate.
“…”
Sliding the thin chain around his neck, he tucked the amulet
under his shirt.
—Win.
The sun was just peeking over the mountains in the distance.
The time limit for the Castle Siege War Game had been set at
three days. Apollo Familia would win if either he was alive after
that time or if the enemy general—without a doubt, Bell Cranell—
was defeated in combat.
It was their role as the defender to make sure the castle was
ready, but it was obvious that they could win without all this fuss.
Hyacinthus had heard that the enemy ranks had increased as of
late, but they would face no more than five combatants. What
point was there in having more than one hundred warriors repair
a castle when they could crush their enemy outright in a head-to-
head battle?
The disgruntled man walked away from the window and took a
seat on the throne at the back of the room. The throne itself had
been there when Apollo Familia first arrived, but they had made
a few modifications. Very comfortable, the back of the ornate
chair was an enlarged version of the Familia emblem, a burning
sun with a bow and arrow. The rest of the room was decorated
with artwork and had been cleaned spotless because Hyacinthus
had ordered everyone under his command to make the space
pleasing to the eye.
“Daph…”
“Cassandra?”
She came to a stop in front of one of the lamps, only half of her
face illuminated in the light. She embraced her own trembling
body with both arms as if she were afraid it would fall apart.
“Huh?”
“Another dream? You know it’s too late to do that now. Get it
together.”
“No, we can’t let it in. There’s still time; it mustn’t come in-
side…”
Luan yelled at the top of his lungs, chasing the last cart as he
watched the castle gate start to close.
The driver of the last cart ordered his horse to gallop to cover
the distance, forcing the prum into an all-out sprint just to make
it inside the gate before it shut completely. A dull thud sounded a
moment after he slid between the massive iron blocks.
“Why, why would you shut it when I’m still out there?” the
small prum man asked in a pathetic, panting voice to the excep-
tionally large animal person standing at the gate controls.
“Aaah…”
Daphne had never seen her friend like this. Although she felt
something was wrong with the girl, Daphne turned to leave.
“Sorry.”
“Thanks.”
“?”
“Never mind…Yo, you can take these now. But I warn you,
they were very rushed so I’m not sure about their full power or
how long they’ll last. Don’t waste them.”
“Understood.”
The War Game everyone had been waiting for was finally here.
There was an atmosphere of energy and passion not normally
seen within the city wall.
“—I am Ganesha!”
The Guild had worked with the merchants to turn this match
into a holiday of sorts. Many people from other cities around the
world would come to Orario to watch the battle, meaning more
customers for the merchants. At the same time, the Guild used
this opportunity to advertise Orario’s image and draw more ad-
venturers into the city.
“Woah, they’re livin’ it up out there!” said Loki with her face
plastered to the window, looking down at the crowds.
The ones not present in Babel Tower had chosen to watch the
game in the bars among the people or with their followers from
the comfort of their own homes.
“Yeah, don’t worry about it. The only ones who would care
aren’t here anyway.”
Hermes lifted his chin toward the ceiling and took a deep
breath.
“—Granted.”
“__________!”
The gods were only allowed to use one specific type of Ar-
canum—the “Divine Mirror.” Any god or goddess could use their
power of clairvoyance to show what was happening at a different
location at any time. It went without saying that it was to increase
their enjoyment of life on Gekai.
This way, every deity in Orario could watch the War Game
alongside their children, even though the battle would take place
far from the city.
“Now that the mirrors are in place, I’ll set the stage once
again! Today’s War Game is a Castle Siege battle between Hestia
Familia and Apollo Familia! Both factions’ combatants are al-
ready in place and waiting for the signal to begin!”
“All bets in—?! Won’t accept any once things get under way!”
Ibly’s voice echoed through all the bars in the city. The owner
of one such establishment raised his voice to cut through the din
of his patrons as well as the commentary. Merchants and adven-
turers alike were laying odds and making bets on the outcome of
the War Game between Hestia Familia and Apollo Familia. Their
favorite ale in one hand and large amounts of money in the other,
the patrons made their bets and took their seats in front of one of
the many “windows.”
Gods and goddesses were known for going after the jackpot
rather than making safe bets. The two adventurers looked at
three in particular with blank stares as the deities became more
and more enthralled with the mirror in front of them. “Uahh!”
“It’s time, it’s time!” “Come on, lucky rabbit!” Tickets in hand, all
three were shaking with anticipation and praying with all their
might.
Every corner of the city had been whipped into a frenzy. Their
furor would boil over at this rate.
“…”
The god’s hair had been perfectly set for the occasion. He ap-
proached Hestia’s seat with a smug grin plastered on his lips.
Hestia didn’t respond, only turned her back to him with her eyes
glued on her own personal mirror.
“My, my,” said Apollo with a shrug. He started back to his own
chair, calm and extremely self-assured.
“Here we go…”
“Yes…”
Eina and Misha talked quietly as both girls watched the large
Divine Mirror floating behind the stage.
And then…
“The War Game—has begun!”
Loud, deep bells rang out to signal the start of the battle.
The ringing of the bells that signaled the start of the War
Game wafted through the windows from afar.
Since this was a castle siege, the time limit had been set at
three days. The vast majority of Apollo Familia believed that
their opponent’s strategy would be to wait until the last day when
their concentration would be lowest because they didn’t have the
numbers to attack the castle head-on. As long as they kept their
eye out for any probing attacks, they should be fine right where
they were.
The castle itself was deceptively wide, big enough that one
hundred people would have difficulty maintaining a constant vi-
sual around its entire circumference. They would always be short-
handed somewhere. Luan didn’t want to leave the comfort of the
inner castle, but he begrudgingly obeyed the order.
“…Looking out.”
There was almost nothing out there. Sure, there was a random
tree or boulder here and there, but no place for anyone to hide.
The grasslands spread out from the north and out to the east. A
river ran past the castle to the south and the edge of a forest was
visible to the west. A gust of wind passed through the prum’s hair
as he narrowed his eyes toward the north, when he heard voices
coming from behind.
“What’re you worried about? This big guy’s got a few presents
for anyone who shows up.”
It was then—
“H-hey!”
“What’s that…?”
All three of them stood, watching the figure come within one
hundred meders of the castle wall.
Whoosh! It spread its arms out wide, outer cloak flying open,
exposing what was hidden underneath.
“Wh-what—wassat?!”
Utter chaos broke out within the castle the second that the
magical energy hit the wall.
The breeze took enough of the clouds of smoke away for them
to see that a piece of the wall was missing.
Luan, who had been knocked off the top of the wall by the first
blast, climbed back up. The same people who ordered him to
“look out” a few moments ago brushed up to him in a panic.
“How many?!”
“J-just one!”
There was no other magic sword in this wide world that could
possibly break through a wall of that size in one hit. Since this
wasn’t cast Magic, Luan’s suggestion was the only explanation
that made sense. Any doubts they had instantly disappeared.
“To think, there would come a day when I would use this magic
sword…”
There were even stories about how they’d used Crozzo Magic
Swords to turn a previously impenetrable fortress into a pile of
rubble in one night. The ultimate siege weapon.
“If you insist on doing nothing, I’ll bring the castle down on
top of you.”
One more spin, and yet another explosion rocked the castle.
“S-status report! What the hell is going on?!”
“Orders from Hyacinthus! Take fifty fighters and take that guy
out!”
“Fifty?!”
“Guh, guahh…?!”
The magic sword had exceeded its limit. The violet blade
began to crack the moment that Lissos ordered a full-out assault
to seize the opportunity.
“S-so fast?!”
“Haa!”
“!”
Lissos timed his sneak attack to land the moment the hooded
adventurer was repelling another weapon. The tip of his dagger
cut across the enemy’s cheek.
The side of her hood had been sliced open enough to reveal,
for just a moment, a long ear in the shape of a leaf. Time froze for
Lissos as he realized the hooded adventurer was another elf. Fury
spread through his veins like wildfire.
Rage filled Lissos’s body to the point that his ears were burn-
ing red as he dove toward the hooded adventurer.
“—”
Time stood still as Lissos watched his opponent step in, her
words overpowering him as her weapon came forward.
“If it is shameful to rescue a friend, I shall gladly accept that.”
Lissos saw her feet leave the ground in a spin before losing
consciousness on impact.
“Please tell us, Lord Ganesha, just what are those ferocious
magic swords?”
“Those are—Ganesha?!”
Three gods had gathered in the corner, all watching the same
mirror and exchanging opinions. Back at the main table, “Cheh!”
Apollo snapped his tongue in disgust. He bared his white teeth
menacingly at Hestia, but the young-looking goddess didn’t look
up from her own mirror.
The prum Luan was the first to recognize the danger and
alerted his allies to Mikoto’s presence.
She used the stairwells inside the tower to emerge on the roof
of the inner sanctum, all the while keeping her eyes locked on the
strange tower where the enemy general was waiting on his
throne. Her enemies moved to surround her and cut off her ad-
vance.
“I call upon the god, the destroyer of any and all, for guid-
ance from the heavens. Grant this trivial body divine power be-
yond power.”
“That one’s got a magic sword, too! She’s going for Hy-
acinthus!”
Arrows and spells shot from higher towers peppered the stone
roof at her feet. Mikoto pushed on, the song of her spell dancing
on the breeze.
“—?”
Her ruse was over. The next wave of arrows ripped the camou-
flage clean off her back and exposed her lithe limbs. The attacks
of her pursuers intensified; arrows buried themselves in her bat-
tle cloth and spells burned her tender skin. Fragments of stones
flying through the air left cuts and bruises on her face and neck.
She almost fell countless times, but never did she stop conjur-
ing her spell. Mikoto pressed forward at full speed.
No matter how many arrows hit her, how many spells barred
her path, she would grit her teeth and press on.
Mikoto raced across the stone roof. Knowing full well that she
would be unable to finish her spell if drawn into combat, she
made a hard turn and rushed toward the central tower, arriving
at the castle’s inner courtyard.
Doing her best to evade incoming arrows and keeping her eyes
focused on the looming tower, she jumped off the roof and into
the air.
The threat of a magic sword had drawn them in. The adventur-
ers in the courtyard looked up at the girl in the air as she focused
her gaze toward the clouds.
“—Shinbu Tousei!”
“Futsu no Tama!”
Many rings of light shot out from beneath her as the sword of
violet light came crashing down to her feet.
“Gh-gahhhhhhh…?!”
The adventurers trapped underneath the violet dome gener-
ated from the top of the sword cried out in pain.
The girl had her fists clenched, feet planted firmly on the
ground as she endured the full brunt of her own spell.
Self-sacrifice.
“Hang in there…”
“She plans to keep the enemies in the courtyard?”
Including the group that had gone to engage Lyu during the
magic-sword attack, Apollo Familia’s forces had been cut by al-
most 80 percent.
“What is?”
“The better the quality, and the faster word comes in, it can be
the ultimate trump card.”
Asfi exchanged words with her god before looking back at the
mirror. Only one person was reflected inside: a prum with his
head on a swivel as he ran through a hallway. Luan encountered
no guards as he ran quietly to the fully intact west gate of the cas-
tle.
Then the man opened the west gate by turning a wheel with
his own hands—granting Bell and Welf entrance to the castle.
“A traitor—?!”
“Wha…Eh…Hah…?!”
He stood up from the table with such force that his chair flew
backward, slamming to the floor behind him. Anger had boiled
up inside him to the point that his face started to contort and
change color as he opened and closed his mouth.
Yes…!
She gazed at all the members of her family with trusting eyes
in the mirror in front of her.
It was most definitely a man’s voice, but Luan’s tone was sur-
prisingly feminine. His face was male, too, but the way he smiled
at Welf was the spitting image of their young ally. Bell ran up
along the other side and grinned at their unsung hero, their sup-
porter.
Luan the traitor was actually Lilly in disguise using her magic.
The real Luan had been captured almost four days ago on the
night that Apollo Familia first set out to the castle ruins. He was
currently in a random shed outside the city wall—no doubt view-
ing the War Game under Miach’s watchful eyes. Lilly had taken
his place, copying his voice and mannerisms to the point that no
one noticed a difference. She’d been collecting information from
inside the castle ever since.
Being Level 4, Lyu would draw out half of the enemy’s forces
and keep them busy while Mikoto cut the remaining forces in half
yet again by restraining them inside the castle grounds.
Lastly, Welf would escort Bell all the way to the throne room.
Everything was going exactly the way that Lilly and Hestia had
drawn it up.
“No, there’s no entrance. The thing may look pretty but it’s
sturdy as a rock. It’ll take time to get there and enemies will
swarm in. But, once you get inside…”
The prum “man” asked Welf to watch Bell’s back and grinned.
Then he split off from the two humans. The only people who
knew “Luan’s” true allegiance were the people watching the mir-
rors in Orario. Lilly could still stir up enough chaos inside the
castle to keep the remaining enemies away from her allies.
“Let’s do this.”
“Yeah!”
“You don’t need to tell me the wall’s been destroyed, I can see
that from here! Why is the castle so empty?!”
Smoke was still rising from the north and east walls; she had a
direct view from one of the many windows around her. She was
trying to get a straight answer out of the messenger who had
brought news from the front lines.
“Luan…betrayed us…?”
Daphne cursed through her teeth. Not only was she angry at
Hyacinthus’s way of looking down on their enemy since before
the War Game, but also at herself for hesitating to act the mo-
ment the north wall collapsed.
Daphne’s plan was to flood the sky bridge with so many war-
riors that it would be impossible for Bell and Welf to pass. The
hallway in the sky was surprisingly wide—it would take more
than ten large men in full body armor, standing shoulder to
shoulder, to seal it off completely. She knew it would take several
seconds for them to approach from the other side. Windows dot-
ted the walls, a very solid ceiling above and a red carpet running
down the full length of the floor. There were no obstacles in the
way, no cover. Daphne ordered the mages to start casting.
Finally, the two humans appeared at the other end of the hall-
way.
“Archers to the front! They have nowhere to run—shoot every-
thing you’ve got! Mages, fire on my command!”
Each archer and magic user had a straight shot to their target,
a literal firing range. Magic with a decent blast radius would wipe
out anything in this confined space. There would be no escape.
“—GO!”
At the same time, the man with the massive sword over his
shoulder—Welf—yelled.
“FIRE!”
“Blasphemous Burn!”
A short-trigger spell.
Silver, murky mist silently flowed like mercury from the palm
of his hand.
The mist overtook Bell and inundated the enemy ranks around
Daphne.
“____”
KA-BOOM!
“Huh?!”
“?!”
The tip of his sword on the floor, Welf looked Daphne in the
eyes just over the hilt of his weapon.
Loki watched the two battle on her own mirror, a playful grin
growing on her lips as she watched the red-haired man force
Daphne away from the main tower.
The main table inside Babel Tower. Loki sat next to Hephais-
tos, who had just allowed Welf to join Hestia Familia. This was
the trickster’s chance to have a little fun.
“Who knows.”
The atmosphere inside the bars had become thick with ten-
sion, adventurers restless.
“…”
Syr stood next to the two girls, unable to focus on her job in
the slightest as she watched Bell on the mirror.
“Yes.”
Aiz stood next to her, golden gaze nailed to the boy reflected
inside.
“Yes, they’re doing very well…But even without all the tricks,
couldn’t they have just sent that hooded adventurer with the
magic swords straight in and let the cards fall as they may? That
would’ve been so much easier.”
Tione stood behind the two girls, watching the action over
their heads as she asked her own question.
“…Impossible.”
The three started calmly breaking down the group’s tactics for
her when—
“Rabbit Boy wants to settle the score with the perv himself.”
“…Nope.”
Bell made it through the sky bridge and into the main tower by
following the instructions that Lilly had given him.
The tower containing the throne room was expansive. Old rugs
covered the stone floor and the walls were decorated with dust-
covered artwork. Bell felt like he’d walked into a mansion that
had been abandoned by its owner.
“SHAA!”
“!”
They’d spent the night before the War Game in the forest to
the west of the old castle. The experienced elvish warrior had
pulled him aside under the moonlight.
Thanks to the hastily forged magic swords, Bell and the others
wouldn’t have to worry about directly assaulting the castle. Con-
sidering the defensive advantage given to an already powerful
enemy, a plan to have the “Gale Wind” spearhead an attack was
also scrapped.
Hestia, Lilly, Welf, Mikoto, the audience, and most likely every
god—but most of all, Bell himself.
He wanted to roar out with the pain of not being good enough,
the tears he’d shed.
The bar, in the middle of the city, and today. Bell swore that he
would surpass that man on their third encounter.
The last of his enemies were in the throne room. The general,
Hyacinthus, and his personal guards were waiting for him there.
Clenching his fist, the boy looked up—ring, ring, ring. A chim-
ing sound echoed around him.
The messenger elf flew through the main doors and instantly
sent a wave of panic through the throne room.
The fact that Bell had penetrated this far into the inner de-
fenses of the castle left all of them in shock. Word that reinforce-
ments were needed below made all of them draw their weapons
and dash toward the door. That is, all but one.
The girl, wearing a dress-style battle cloth, her long hair tied
back, had been pleading with Hyacinthus to vacate to the throne
room since early that morning. Everything about the desperation
in her cowardly message made his skin crawl.
“Can you not see?! I’m here along with several other warriors.
Bell Cranell coming in here alone would spell his own demise!”
She held her quivering body, her line of vision jumping from
stone to stone on the throne room floor.
“Ah…ahhh.”
“Lightning…”
Ring, ring.
There wasn’t a soul in his way. His ruby-red eyes traced the
path of the spiral stairwell before focusing on the specks of light
circling around his right arm.
The Grand Bell had not been heard since the battle on the
eighteenth floor of the Dungeon.
There must be some kind of trigger because Bell was sure this
was exactly the way he charged his attack before. Scouring his
memory, he got the feeling that the voice of a divine being came
to him at that time.
“…!”
“Lightning—really?”
“The sky is an azure blue, white puffy clouds here and there.
And you’re telling me lightning will fall?!”
However…
“Not fall…”
“Lightning…will rise.”
“What?”
—One minute.
“Firebolt.”
“____”
All words left Hyacinthus the moment he saw the first blast
break through and continue into the ceiling.
A deafening explosion.
Not a single deity in the chamber kept their seat as they roared
with excitement.
Most of the gods and goddesses were filled with a mix of shock
and admiration for Bell’s trigger-less spell.
“…,…?!”
“…!”
Hestia didn’t move, either, eyes not budging from her mirror.
“Haa—, ghaa—…?!”
The upper half of the main tower was gone. The throne room
itself had been completely destroyed by a blast that came from di-
rectly beneath it. Even now, the last of the electrical blasts were
carving their way through clouds high in the sky, on their way to-
ward the shining sun.
“Cassandra?! Ron?!”
The smoke lifted enough for him to get a better view of the pile
of stones a few meders away from him. A chill ran up Hy-
acinthus’s spine when he realized there was a human body buried
in the rubble.
—Wiped out.
He was the only one left. His normally calm and refined de-
meanor crumbled.
His enemy was still alive—he knew it. The urge to tear that boy
into pieces consumed him.
His heart was racing; sweat continually poured down his face.
The enemy was hiding in the smoke, blade trained on his throat.
Hyacinthus spun to the left, looked back to the right, and then
turned all the way around. The coolheaded warrior was gone. He
couldn’t stand still, watching every single twist of the rising
smoke in all directions.
“____”
Two red knives and one long, rouge blade collided in an explo-
sion of sparks.
“UWHHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA-
AAAAAAAAAAAA!”
Orario shook.
“…?!”
Their attacks were too fast to follow. As soon as the mirror re-
flected one successfully blocked attack, the echoes of the next
three came through loud and clear. The moment that Hyacinthus
squared his shoulders, the white-haired boy darted away, rolling
to his side, then to a blind spot, always staying out of the flam-
berge’s path.
The man could feel every impact of the two knives against his
weapon in the bones of his fingers. Pain shot through them every
time.
—Who?
—Who is this?
The man put all of his strength into one overarching swing at
the head of this strange adventurer and yelled:
Angry jeers could be heard from the city below as every god in-
side Babel watched Hyacinthus draw a shortsword from his belt
and continue the fight. Hestia bit her lip as she watched the two
engage in a highly mobile, hit-and-run style of combat on her
own mirror. Hermes cocked an eyebrow and made his way to her
side.
“What was his Status before ranking up? Come on, I promise I
won’t tell anyone else. The secret’s safe with me, so please?”
Hestia’s eyes didn’t leave the mirror. She didn’t even move as
she responded in a quiet voice:
“See?”
Hermes came to realize that Hestia wasn’t smiling and the re-
ality of what she had said began to sink in.
“Really?”
“Really.”
Hermes took a step forward, the tingly feeling flooded his body
as yet another smile grew on his lips.
“Quiet, Hermes.”
“Hu…!”
“______?!”
Ushiwakamaru-Shiki.
Welf, now a High Smith, had put his heart and soul into forg-
ing this new weapon from the remaining half of Bell’s Minotaur
Horn. With far more destructive power than the original Ushi-
wakamaru, the menacing spirit of the Minotaur seemed to reside
within the blade itself. In fact, Bell had to concentrate with all his
might to prevent the Minotaur’s bloodlust from overtaking him as
he advanced on Hyacinthus.
However, just because he’d disarmed his enemy and had him
against the ropes didn’t mean Bell was confident of victory.
“Guhh…?!”
One week of combat training under Aiz and Tiona had come to
a head. Bell was on par with his opponent in terms of technique
and footwork; everything was coming together. Every lesson that
had been pounded into his body by fist, foot, and blade by the
top-class adventurers was pushing Hyacinthus farther and far-
ther back across the field of debris.
“U-OOHHHHHHHHHH?!”
“?!”
Then—
“My name is sin, jealously of the wind. This body calls forth
your gust!”
“Firebolt!”
The man’s long body bent backward. His battle cloth was now
nothing more than rags covering charred skin. However, Hy-
acinthus endured.
Not only that, the magic power gathering in his hands was un-
affected.
“YAA–?!”
“?!”
Cassandra’s tackle made contact with his arm at the same in-
stant the boy’s magic was released, protecting Hyacinthus from
the blast.
“Mr. Bell!”
“Kyaahhh?!”
The girl was the first one to arrive from the castle. Tackling
Cassandra from behind, the two of them rolled down the pile of
stones and onto the grass below.
“—Nuuuahhhhh!”
Bell immediately stuck out his left hand to fire again, but Hy-
acinthus had finished casting. The man pulled his shoulders back
as his torso twisted at the waist.
“Aro Zephyros!”
A ring the size of his body appeared between his hands, shin-
ing bright as the sun.
“Firebolt!”
The two Magics collided, but the disk had no trouble cutting
through the electric flames.
“?!”
“Guh!”
“Pointless!”
A westerly wind pushing his body to the east, Bell made a des-
perate jump to get out of the disk’s path.
“Rubele!”
“—GAH!”
Bell’s body had been extended, arms reaching out, when Hy-
acinthus triggered the explosion of the disk.
The explosion threw the boy’s helpless body several meders,
careening into another pile of debris.
(____)
Eina’s face turned pale, Syr prayed, Bete snapped his tongue.
Tiona held her breath—but in the golden eyes of the girl sitting
next to her…
Was the same memory that was flashing before the boy’s ruby-
red eyes.
(____)
Two shadows colliding above the city wall, the sky orange be-
fore sunset.
—Don’t forget.
((—Now))
All of the emotions stewing inside him were focused into the
point of his sword for one deadly thrust. He was going to end this
by running Bell clean through.
Bell bent his knees and rolled onto his back a moment later.
Seeing his enemy less than three meders away, Bell vigorously
rolled backward once again in time to dodge the incoming blade.
“____”
Bell rolled over his shoulder once again and felt his feet con-
nect with soil—he sprang forward.
“—Haa!”
Point-blank range.
“—W-waaaaaaiit!”
Hyacinthus saw the boy coming but was unable to evade his
attack because his body was still stuck in the same thrusting posi-
tion, right arm forward, left arm back.
Every muscle in the boy’s body tensed before filling the “fang”
of his fist with every ounce of energy he had left.
“UWAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHH!”
Impact.
“GeHAA?!”
A sharp thud rang out before a loud crash. The man’s body hit
the ground with such force that he flew high into the air on the
first bounce; what was left of his cape was torn to shreds as he
spun like a top. He fell to the ground again only to have his mo-
mentum launch him skyward once more.
Eyes rolled back in his head and the giant crater on his cheek,
the man did not try to stand.
Cassandra was about to throw Lilly off her body when she saw
the final blow. The long-haired girl fell to her knees.
“__________________________!”
Church bells rang out throughout the city to mark the end of
the War Game just as the final blow had been delivered at the
castle ruins.
“Bell…!”
“““Yahh HAAAA!”””
“““SON OF A BITCH!”””
“““YESSS–SAA!”””
Her cheeks blushed as she finally looked away from the mirror
floating in front of the wall and turned her attention toward the
customers. “Dammit, I’ve lost everything!” “Hey, Syr, I’m gonna
need a crap-ton of ale over here!” She managed to put her “work
smile” on as the patrons began to drown their sorrow in as much
alcohol as they could afford.
“Yes…”
Tiona had been literally dancing around the room just mo-
ments earlier, but now the Amazon stood next to Aiz as they
watched a mirror. Slowly but surely the wheat-skinned girl
turned to her friend with a radiant smile on her lips.
“Congrats…”
The largest mirror in the street showed the boy’s allies gather-
ing around him, ruffling his hair and congratulating him like fam-
ily. Others showed scenes of other cities overtaken by the thrill of
the good fight.
The same was true of the gods in Babel Tower. Several of them
had gathered together, comparing notes and admiring the chil-
dren or offering criticism in their own reviews of the War Game.
“Wha…ha…, eh…?”
One of them however, Apollo, looked like a ghost as he stood
frozen next to the table.
“A-PO-LL-O.”
Then, schreee.
A dark aura emerged as she stood up from the table. Head an-
gled down, no one could see her eyes behind her black bangs. Her
chin suddenly jerked up, blue eyes flashing as they locked on her
target: Apollo. Tap, tap. She walked toward him.
“Hy-hyeee!”
Bell had nearly been stolen from her, her home was destroyed,
and she’d been chased at arrow point around the city, among
other hardships.
All of the pent-up anger that hadn’t been allowed to vent until
this moment was on the verge of exploding within her. The god
on the floor could see it in her eyes. He shook as Hestia stood
over him, glaring down with the utmost intensity. The god’s eyes
began to water.
“H-hear me out, Hestia! This was all just an impulse! That
child of yours was just so cute, I couldn’t help but pinch his
cheeks a little…P-please, have mercy on me, O Goddess of Affec-
tion! We were once destined to share marital bliss!”
“Shut—your—mouth.”
The young goddess cut off his pleading with the ferocity of
Hades himself.
All the other gods present had made a large circle around the
two deities, enjoying every second of the climax. They couldn’t
wait to see the young goddess’s Divine Judgment on the offender
for his sins.
“HyGAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH-
HHH!”
Bell reunited with his allies inside the castle that was now
missing its throne room and a good deal of its outer wall. Of
course, all of them were elated by their victory.
“Was Lilly…useful?”
She hadn’t felt like this since the day that their relationship
had been reset. The prum girl blushed as she looked up at him
with a smile as radiant as a blooming sunflower.
“Ah, sure.”
Lyu suggested from beneath her hood, eyes locked on Bell’s in-
jured right shoulder.
The taste of victory in their mouths, the group made their way
through the debris inside the castle walls.
“…?”
Bell couldn’t help but feel that this amulet had sacrificed itself
to save him.
Bell took a closer look at the broken jewel and saw something
that looked like an emblem engraved in the casing behind it.
The boy stopped moving to look at the jewel. Welf had noticed
and called out to him.
“…”
Just who was the adventurer who gave Syr this amulet?
And so the curtain fell on the War Game, with Hestia Familia
standing victorious.
The fervor had yet to die down, but there was still something
that needed to be taken care of.
The small girl held out a bag stuffed full of gold coins.
Soma, clad in his dirty robe, took the bag from her without a
word.
Two days had passed since the War Game ended. Lilly had
journeyed to Soma Familia’s home by herself.
Every val that had been held in Apollo’s name now belonged to
Hestia Familia. Lilly took a large part of it and returned to her
former home to exchange the money for the Hestia Knife, which
had been used as collateral.
Her new family offered to go with her, but Lilly declined. She
told them that she had to see this through to the end on her own.
“…”
He didn’t even check the contents of the bag before pulling the
knife out from inside his robe and handing it to Lilly.
Her loose robe bent around her small body as Lilly bowed. Her
face down, she never had a chance to make eye contact with
Soma. One step back, turn, a few more steps, and she paused for
a moment in front of the door.
“…”
She had wanted to hear his words for the longest time, but at
least now, at the end, she was grateful to hear them. Lilly nodded,
her chin hitting her shoulder.
“Lilly will…” she said in a quivering voice to the deity who had
remembered her name.
“…”
““Ooohhhh—””
Bell, Lilly, Welf, and Mikoto stood in awe of the building Hes-
tia pointed at.
It was three stories tall; they had to crane their necks to get a
good look at the top floor. Hestia went on to say that there were
covered passages along with more gardens inside. The property
was surrounded by a tall iron fence. Flowers and trees hid most of
the bars from view.
“The ones who lived here before had…strange tastes. So, since
we’ve got a lot of money, I say we do some remodeling! If you
have any requests, let me know!”
“Now that we can finally puff out our chests and say we’re a
proper Familia, don’t you think we should decide on an emblem
first?”
““Good point!””
Hestia took a seat on the front steps of the manor. Pulling out
a small piece of paper and a pen, she set to work on sketching a
picture. Bell and the others formed a half circle around her,
watching her pen move while standing shoulder to shoulder.
Hestia’s pen didn’t stop for an instant until she turned the
paper around to show her new family, grinning from ear to ear.
Welf, Mikoto, and Lilly each held the paper in their hands and
gave the design a once-over.
“That’s not it at all. This emblem, it’s all about the relationship
between Lady Hestia and Mr. Bell!”
The three of them had different reactions, but Hestia used her
authority as a goddess to ignore them and said in a very satisfied
voice:
Smiling once again, she made eye contact with Bell and said:
The boy held out the paper once again for everyone to see.
At the same time, the early stages where very few characters
must face difficult odds to build their relationships is one of the
most important, and in my opinion the most entertaining, parts
of the story. I took my time in developing this part of my own
work in books one through five, sacrificing larger story arcs in the
process. Back when I first started writing the stories, I don’t know
how many times I heard the phrase “Wouldn’t it be a good idea to
increase the party size?” I would like to thank everyone who
worked with me for listening to my selfish desires and allowed me
to take my time in developing each character in turn. You have
my gratitude.
Gods, family, and Familia all came together to form the back-
bone of the story. As soon as the idea for a “War Game between
the Gods” came to me, the story for this book fell into place with
support from loyal readers. I can’t thank you enough.
Also, I would like to thank all of the guest artists who came to-
gether to produce the limited-edition art book that was released
along with this volume. NOCO, Ms. Haruko Iizuka, Mr. Eiji Usat-
suka, Mr. Noboru Kannadu, Mr. Ki Takaya, Mikeo, YASU: thank
you for lending your talents and individual vision to this project.
Each of you deserves great praise for your marvelous drawings.
Fujino Omori