âRun!â
Electra followed her own advice.
She booked it towards the beach, half running into me.
âGahâ!â She knocked me off my feet, and I crashed into the surf. It drove the air from my lungs and scattered my armful of salvaged parts into the waves. My hands snapped out, but I caught nothing but air. The thing let out an ululating cry.
The sound hit me like a blow. I gasped, sound driving through my head like nine inch nails. Someone started screaming. I didnât realize that someone was me until Iâd already clapped my hands over my ears. Blinking rapidly, I saw the mass of tentacles advance on me in an roiling mass.
I was going to die here.
Then a hand came down on my shoulder. It cut through the fog surrounding me. I only had time to blink before Electra hauled me to my feet. âCome on!â Her voice sent my head spinning again, but in a good way, spinning back to the real world and away from whatever mess the monster had left me in.
âWe have to run!â
I nodded, turning with the hero to dash towards the shore. As I ran, I snatched up what bits of metal and wire that I could, thoughts churning as frantically as the waves beneath my feet.
Unfortunately, I was also much shorter than Electra, and the water was pouring up the beach now, as if someone had upended a pitcher the size of a stadium onto the coast. I scrambled, armful of salvaged parts in hand, but I barely managed to make any headway.
Beneath my feet, the waves pulled back at the sand, making me feel like I was running on a treadmill as I struggled not to slip on the softening sand.
Ahead of me, Electra pulled further and further away with each step. The water only came up to her calves, but for me, each step felt like I was running through molasses instead of just water.
In addition to the twenty pounds of metal in my arms. But I couldnât drop it.
Not if we were going to make it out alive.
Electra glanced back over her shoulder, and I felt my heart fall to the bottom of my feet as her expression paled. âJust run!â She waved her hand. âWe donât need that stuff!â
I shook my head, breath heaving.
So much, I thought, for no more cardio today.
âYouâre gonna die!â
âWithoutââ I heaved a breath, âthis, weââ I almost fell, my ankle screaming as it twisted, âdie anyway!â
I could see the moment she realized that I wasnât going to make it. Electraâs face flickered through a dozen emotions in the span of a heartbeat, before settling on resignation. She was going to leave me, because I was too slow.
And I was going to die.
I bowed my head, legs striving frantically against the waves. It didnât matter if Electra was just out to save her own skin! I didnât need her help! Iâd save myself just like I alwaysâ
I had a moment to blink as a pair of hands grabbed me, looking up just in time to see Electra toss me over her shoulder.
âThis is why!â She turned, legs pumping. âYou never skip leg dayyyyyyyy!â
I gaped.
âThatâs what youâre going with?!â I glanced back, stomach twisting in knots when I saw how close the tentacle thing was.
âYouâre the oneââ The salt water sprayed beneath her feet, âwho canât run to save your life!â
I swallowed a retort. Even with me on her back, the hero was going nearly twice as fast as Iâd managed. I looked away from the monster as my head started to throb. âJust get us to the sand!â
âIâm trying!â
I growled, trying desperately to keep a hold of the metal and wires in my hand. I bit back a curse. Would I even be able to get it set up in time?
It seemed like Iâd have to.
Somehow, I felt a grin spreading across my face.
âBrace yourself!â
My head snapped up at the words. Electra crouched. I felt her muscles tensing beneath me like a steel spring, and then she threw.
I went flying, mouth agape. As I tipped over backwards, I saw Electra a half step behind.
I closed my eyes and curled into a ball, hitting the sand with all the grace and poise of a boulder. The impact drove the air from my lungs and my precious cargo from my grip for the second time.
âNo!â
I forced myself upright, staggering as another mind-bending scream shattered the air. I dove across the sand, snatching up the wire and the metal coil, tossing them farther from the water.
Even now, the waves continued to crash against the shore like a storm. Weâd landed on a berm of higher ground where the sand swept upwards. It was probably the normal high tide mark, showing the edge of the waterâs reach.n/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
Now we had at most a minute until we were back in the water.
And maybe half of that until the tentacled monstrosity got close enough to kill us both. It was speeding up, too. Like it was getting used to walking on land.
I pushed the thought from my head. Now it was my turn.
âKeep running!â Electra skid to a stop besides me, grabbing at my shoulder.
âWhere?â I was already working, frantically twisting a length of scrap metal into a U shape. âWe donât have anywhere to run! The waterâs not stopping!â
âItâll stop!â
âAnd if not?â I shook my head, pulling out a length of wire. âCut this for me, here!â
With a growl, she yanked a thin utility knife from its thigh holster, slicing through the metal with a flick. âWe donât have much time, Empress!â
âYou think I DONâT KNOW THAT?!â
Add the insulator to the metal. There, done. Hereâs hoping it wouldnât burn out.
I ripped my omni-tool from my belt, jamming the head into a crease in my suitâs chest plate. With a twist, the panel popped open, revealing the suitâs reactor. It was a hexagon of metal and glass-steel, generating enough energy to power this suit for the rest of my natural life.
Alternatively, something else for one, massive, load.
Of course, I couldnât just pop the stupid thing out. I grabbed the length of wire again, cursing my good sense. Iâd installed a minor forcefield generator, a precaution which was supposed to stop some enterprising hero from ripping it out and rendering me powerless.
Now, of course, it was more likely to kill me than protect me, so it had to go.
I jammed the insulated piece of metal into the capacitor bank right next to the reactor. This wasnât why I made them open, but it would do the trick. The suit jerked as part of its power flow was cut off. Still, I didnât design my armor to have a single point of failure.
Only now I was realizing that the single point of failure was me.
âAny day now!â
I glared up at Electra. âThen maybe stop distracting me!â
âJust want to make sure youâ!â
âShut! Up!â
I pushed past the tremor in my hands, winding the length of wire around several key junctions, bypassing fuses and resistors. With a grunt, I pushed the other end directly into the charging port, yanking my hand back as the material of my gloves nearly popped from the sudden surge of electricity.
With a whine, the servos in my armor went dead as countless precise circuits and fuses were overloaded all at once, welding them shut.
And like that, my armor died.
All I was left with was a hunk of metal, already bent out of the way, and a glowing power core.
My field disabled, and the much more mundane issue of electrical discharge taken care of, I grabbed the handle in the center of the hexagon, giving it a sharp twist. With a hiss, the entire reactor popped free, resting in my hands with a gentle red glow.
Not that it produced anything but white light; Iâd just tinted the steel-glass red when Iâd made the thing.
I couldnât stop myself from smiling faintly. This little, unassuming core was my lifeâs work. My magnum opus. It was powered by exotic materials Iâd painstakingly stole, crafted at laboratories that had been destroyed, and marooned a literal world away.
Iâd probably never be able to make one again.
âEmpress! Not sure about you butâ!â
A massive tentacle crashed to the sand about a meter away from us.
I sighed. It really was a shame.
âHey, Electra.â I rolled my wrist.
âWhat?â
âCatch!â
I lobbed my power core through the air, watching it tumble end over end towards the surprised hero. My last thought before she grabbed it was, it would really suck if she had a maximum capacity.
Like, really, really suck.
I saw Electra open her mouth, only to freeze when her fingers made contact with the metal cathode of the core, and approximately all of the electricity.
She exploded in an orb of white-blue lightning. Arcs of electricity struck the sand with so much energy that entire swaths of the beach were turned to glass.
For a second, I even lost sight of her, before a glowing figure appeared in the center of the maelstrom of electricity.
I pointed at the thrashing monster. âAny day now!â
The hero blinked at my words, eyes going solid white as the power coursed through her. It took another second, even as she continued to absorb every last drop of power from my reactor, until the idiot finally realized what Iâd done.
She turned towards the massive mound of flesh and eyes as a dozen tentacles reared out of the air above us, ready to slam down and doâ
Well, whatever it was that tentacles did to defenseless young women, I assumed.
It was an immense splotch of red and black against the horizon, nearly taking up all of my view with its beady black eyes and thrashing limbs. As it raised itself over us, it was as if the beast was the darkness itself.
But Electra? Electra was light.
âSorry!â She raised an arm. âBut youâre in the wrong genre, freak!â
I rolled my eyes.
Well, I would have.
But the flash of blinding light, the physical force of the thunderclap, blew me onto my back.
The monster screamed again, but this time in pain.
Electra laughed, her body rising off the ground from the sheer power coursing through her. Each wild arc bent through the air, slamming into the creature as it writhed. The very water around it became charged, feeding the harnessed lightning back into its bulk again and again.
And then, with one final surge, it was over.
I blinked the spots from my eyes. The image of Electra suspended in the air like some kind of Zeus wannabe was literally seared into my retinas. Slowly, I pushed myself to my feet, rubbing at my face.
My ears wouldnât stop ringing.
âDid that kill it?â I winced. I could barely hear my own voice.
âWhat?â Electra turned to look at me, eyes back to their normal dull blue. At some point sheâd fallen back to the ground. âI canât hear you!â
âI said!â This time I yelled for real. âDid that kill it!?â
Then the It moved.
We both spun towards the monster.
If possible, it looked even more grotesque than it had before. All the eyes I could see were popped from the force of the current, great gouts of rancid yellow ichor pouring down its burned and boiled flesh. The thing twitched and spasmed, stretches of its skin sloughing off to reveal blackened muscles and bones beneath.
Its cells, in the billions, realized that they were dead.
I shivered at the sight.
I forced myself off the sand, staggering back. To my side, Electraâs legs gave out, and she collapsed to the ground.
âI donâtââ she doubled over, panting, âthink I can run, anymore.â
âSKRUUUERRRRSIAAAAAAAAA!!!â
I clutched at my ears, fingers coming back red. âI donât think it would let us even if we could.â The beastâs movements became even more frantic. My heart began to sink, as I realized that we hadnât killed it.
Or rather, as tentacles and eyes and blood all cascaded down to the frothing waves, we hadnât killed enough of it.
The monstrosity raised itself up from the water, almost drunkenly, flesh and tentacles sloughing off to reveal a single, massive eye at its core. The cross shaped pupil widened, before looking at me, boring into the depths of my very soul. And I fell into the void of its gaze.
I would have screamed, but I could not find my mouth.
I was nothing.
The darkness was everything.
I struggled, breathlessly, against it, but I couldnât do anything but hold it back for a second longer.
Tendrils of darkness reached towards me.
Thenâ
I gasped, snapping backwards as the real world surged back to fill the void.
In front of me, the massive eye rolled back into the creatureâs morbid mass.
And it crashed down into the waves.
âIs itâ¦â Electra staggered upright. âDead?â
Ding!
I blinked, as a blue box appeared in front of my face.
System Message
For defeating a creature from beyond and communing with forces beyond mortal comprehension, you have unlocked the Demogogue class!
What?
No, seriously, What?!
âOh, hell the fuck yes!â Electra leapt to her feet. âI knew it was an Isekai!â She turned to me, grinning. âThis is gonna be great!â
I stared at the woman, dumbstruck. Then, slowly, I reached up to pinch my nose. âWe almost got killed by a tentacle monster from beyond time and space, and you think itâs gonna be âgreatâ?â
âWell, yeah.â She punched the air. âWe got skills out of it! That means we have a system!â
âA system?â
She gave me a concerned look, and for some reason that made me even more irritated. âNo offense, Empress, but did you not like, have books growing up? TV?â
I glared. âI read real books, not whatever garbage youâre insinuating is literature.â
She gasped, placing a hand against her chest. âYou take that back about my light novels!â
I shook my head, pushing away the creeping feeling of dread and giving into my irritation. âLight novel? So, theyâre not even real books then?â
âYes, they are!â She stalked forward, grabbing onto my shoulders.
I glaredâunfortunatelyâup at her. âItâs in the damn title! Lightânot real!â
âThere are heavy light novels!â
âThatâs just a novel you imbecile!â
âWho killed the giant tentacle monster! Was it you!?â
âYes! It was my invention.â
âBut it was my power!â
âSo, youâre the Light, and Iâm the novel?â
âWhat?â
âExactly my fucking point!â