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Chapter 18: To make friends, first you need to duel each other to the death, sprinkling tidbits about yourself the entire time; hopefully, thatâll add +5 to your likeability meter
Do you ever have that incredible sense of déjà vu when someone frames you and you end up getting chased all the way across Paris for the rest of the week?⦠No? Just him? A-alright.
With the sword pointed at Craft's neck, heâd raised his hands in surrender, keeping his palms close to his face. If the woman moved to kill, heâd only have a sliver of a chance to fend her off and live. Although he wouldnât âdie,â he didnât want to find out how respawning felt like.
For now, there seemed to be a fundamental misunderstanding here.
âNameâs Craftâ â he tried to introduce himself, but the woman pushed her sword an inch closer to his face â âwhoa-kay, I genuinely donât know what youâre talking about.â
âLies. I saw you take it. You must have hidden it somewhere.â
Her sword glowed slightly. Weapons that started to glow were, nine times out of ten, weapons that were about to be used, and they tended not to leave a trace of the target. Well, sometimes the shoes were left standing on the ground.
Craft flinched. âH-hey, I swear! I was with Nightshade or Dane the whole time!â
The woman narrowed her eyes at the mention of Nightshade. She pulled her sword back a little. She might have trusted his alibi, but she wouldnât completely back down.
âEven if you say so, I canât leave you be. The scent of death surrounds you.â Not just her sword, but her entire self glowed. All the colors of the rainbow seeped out of her, and her hair floated up on its own, changing colors to red, green, and blue. âIf it were just me, I can keep one eye open as long as I need â but I canât let you poison Nightshade with your bloodstained ways.â
With the way her hair was colored, and with the way she defended Nightshade, he realized who she was â and just how screwed he was. The problem wasnât losing; if all he had to do was die as an apology, then heâd take the plunge and bank on the respawn system. In front of him, however, was the very same person he had wanted to form a connection with. Even if he won this fight, their future interactions would remain sour.
This wasnât just a fight. It was a negotiation to dispel her presumptions. Aiming for a positive outcome would be too greedy for him to aim for, so for now, as long as she walked away from here with an open mind, heâd count that as a win, and to that end, he steadied himself.
âYour face changed,â the woman said. âThatâs your real one, isnât it?â
âYouâre just half-right, miss,â Craft said. Without turning his back, he took two frying pans hanging from the wall behind him. She showed her teeth. He showed his readiness, wielding the frying pans like table tennis rackets. âI canât tell you which oneâs the real one, not yet. Iâll get back to you when Iâve finalized myself.â
The woman narrowed her eyes. His statement had thrown off her initial evaluation of him. âThen letâs put this to a bet. My win, and you stay away from Nightshade. Your win, and I wonât harass you.â
He shook his head. He hadnât missed how she had narrowed her eyes. She was still evaluating him, which meant she was still operating under uncertainty. I can use that. âThatâs a bad deal. Your win, and Iâll spill one bean a day.â
The woman furrowed her brows. âThatâs a strange deal.â
âBut itâs realistic.â
She paused. With this deal, sheâd win in the long game. âFair.â
âMy win, and youâll have to believe I donât have any ill-will towards anyone.â
The woman sheathed her sword. âIll-will isnât the problemâ â and unsheathed a longer one â âitâs poisoning Nightshadeâs views with your own.â
Sheâs speaking like she knows it as fact. Craft recalled Nightshade saying the two of them were similar in some way. True, the womanâs air was less of a warriorâs right now and more that of an assassinâs. If someone like him ended up in Amatoria, it wasnât far-fetched to think there were others like him, too â others who had lived regretfully.
Perhaps the woman had witnessed the corruption of sunshine before. He had as well.
âI donât want that either,â Craft said.
âSo you understand.â
He gritted his teeth and sighed. âWhen I met her, I thought she was too kind for me.â Saying this was a gamble, but if the two of them were truly similar, then this could be a power move that would establish more rapport than anything else he could say.
The narrative has been taken without permission. Report any sightings.
The woman winced. âSo you understand.â She shifted her stance. âMy win, youâll declassify something every day, and you are not to see Nightshade without my supervision. Your win, and only Nightshade can tell me to cut you down.â
He shouldnât squeeze more out of this. âIâm fine with that.â
To his surprise, copies of the same system panel appeared in front of their faces.
[Sanctioned Duel Initializing: State your full names and true causes.]
âLei-rei, in defense of my dearest friend.â
âCraft Bowen.â He paused. Why âtrue causesâ? Could he lie? No, it didnât matter. The System was an extension of Enthusia, and he wouldnât lie to her. âTo make one.â
Lei-reiâs eyes widened.
[Logging duel. Please wait for the countdown.]
[3â¦]
[2â¦]
[1â¦]
[This is your captain speaking. Have a safe fight! -E]
Craft took the initiative. He stepped forward swinging a frying pan and swatting Lei-reiâs sword away with a ping! It surprised him she hadnât taken the first move; she was obviously faster and stronger than him.
Initiative was only decisive against the indecisive. Lei-rei counter-attacked, but with her first sword swatted aside, she unsheathed her shorter sword and cut upwards in a single motion.
Craft distanced himself. His left hand felt lighter, and when he glanced down, he only found the panâs handle, and none of the pan itself.
He eyed Lei-rei. She sheathed her longer sword, leaving her only with the shorter one. Sheâs switching weapons? Whatâs with that style? Around her, the walls and ceiling had a single continuous gash. Her attack had extended further than the physical length of the blade implied. Thatâs one hell of a sharp sword.
Lei-reiâs earlier hesitation must have been a fluke, he thought. They were both assassins, and every moment of both pause and action had intent.
She cut forwards in a blink. Craft jumped and twisted his body, and for a split second, he was standing on the ceiling. He had a birdâs-eye view of Lei-reiâs attack, and he figured her out: sheâd attack with her shorter sword as a feint, then draw out her longer sword behind it, making him underestimate her reach.
More importantly, whether or not her swords were sheathed didnât affect her attack speed. Everything on her was, effectively, already a drawn weapon â the embodiment of âswitching to your sidearm is faster than reloadingâ being exploited so that all her attacks come from switching swords. Scary.
He barreled downwards for an attack with his last frying pan. She parried that out of the way, and now, they kept their distance from each other.
âSo you werenât human,â Lei-rei said.
He put more distance between them. Her words were more surprising than all her attacks so far. âI am, though!â
She dashed forward and cut up air where Craft was standing, turning the space into a blender with Lei-rei as its engine. The man himself slipped between her blender-like dance, running on the walls and losing his last frying pan in the process.
Lei-rei stopped and faced him anew. âWith that athleticism?â
The two found themselves circling each other around the dinner table. The way Lei-reiâs eyes had widened at the start of the duel still stuck to him. Had her impression of him changed the moment he worded his stake in this fight the way he did?
It might be worth bridging her understanding of him even now, even if by a little bit.
âI survived. The others didnât,â he said.
âThat so?â she said frankly.
âThatâs just how it is.â
âFor us, isnât it?â
They both kicked the dinner table at the same time. Each one had intended to launch it into the enemyâs face, but with their powers combined, they just launched it into the ceiling.
Dust fell between them. The table had gotten stuck in the ceiling.
The two stared at each other for a moment. They both knew they werenât eating on a table tonight â and that Craft was at a severe disadvantage. All he had for weapons now were two pan handles, while Lei-rei was poised to cut him to bits any moment now.
There wasnât any need for last words. Lei-rei took the opening and rushed in, cutting with the shorter sword and holding the other in reserve â but that was a feint. She drew the shorter sword back and unsheathed the longer sword in the same moment â but that was a feint, too!
She had long known that Craft had seen through her favorite feint earlier, and it was a trivial exercise to simply stack even more feints on top of that.
Her shorter sword hadnât actually been sheathed. Before her longer swordâs attack even cleared, she was already following it with her shorter sword in a reverse-gripped slash. It would be a bad move in ordinary combat, but there was one thing a reverse grip was good for: a surprise, bullshit move at close range from an unexpected angle.
â Craftâs expertise.
Earlier, right before they both kicked the table into the ceiling, he had spotted a handle-less pan on the floor. The dust that had fallen between them had captured Lei-reiâs attention for a split second, long enough for him to hide it behind his leg.
He kicked it up with the side of his foot, aiming for her head, forcing her to veer her long sword to intercept the cast iron frisbee coming from below.
To her surprise, he stepped into the attack. He had long given up on actually winning the fight, but that didnât mean he wanted to come across a pushover.
He threw the first pan handle at her, forcing her to veer away her short sword to intercept it. It wasnât enough to leave her completely open, but it gave him the split second necessary to get into stabbing range.
With the second handle in both hands, he pushed off and thrust forwards, straight into the path of Lei-reiâs blade â
âYou sharpened a pan handle with my own attacks,â she chuckled. âWell played.â
â and delivering the pan handle into her heart.
Lei-reiâs blade had cleaved a path from his shoulder to his chest. There was no blood nor pain in this world. Digital blue pixels like fairy lights spilled out of their wounds, and their visions were clouded by the Systemâs warnings.
[AvatarWarning: Low health!]
[AvatarWarning: Very low health!]
[AvatarWarning: X_X !]
In Craftâs eyes, it was just like being unplugged. The world turned grayscale in one frame, then low-res the next. His vision shattered in halves, flashed white, then went black.
[Respawning in 3⦠2⦠1â¦]
[Applied Day One bonus: No Anima deducted!]
He heard a high-pitched whine, and a tunnel of color pixels exploded outwards from the center of his vision. The rest of his senses â hearing, touch, smell, taste â gently faded in.
There was an incredible sense of déjà vu as Nightshade stood some distance away from the summoning platform, frozen still. Her gaze flittered between him and someone beside him. She puffed up her cheeks and pointed at them. âWhat did you guys dooooo!â
Craft looked at the person beside him. âLetâs call it a draw.â
Lei-rei had closed her eyes. âAnd I never got my groceries done.â Breathing deeply, she nodded solemnly.