1-45 Encircled
The Sword Saint’s Second Life As a Fox Girl
1-45 Encircled
âAre you alright?â asked Lyra who was gazing worriedly at the grimacing Erin.
âIâll be fine,â Erin assured her with her own hand cupped over her nose. âI just need a few moments to get used to it.â
The reason for Erinâs grimace stemmed from the stench the village was exuding due to the scattered bodies and carcasses. It was obvious a massacre had transpired. Corpses in a volume more than carcasses laid strewn about the entire village, indicating the villagers were the one being massacred. Erin could already smell the stench just as the village came into sight but now that they had set foot into the village, the stench was at the level of unbearable for anyone with even a nose slightly more sensitive than the average human. However, Erin's endurance and tolerance were something she had polished in her forty and over years of life and she didnât stop polishing these two traits of hers even after her reincarnation.
As tolerant as Erin could be, the sight of the village was something she would never be used to, the sight of meaningless deaths. It was worse than a war. It was no battle. It was simply a one-sided culling. Men, women, elderly, and even children; no one was discriminated against. The monsters slaughtered them all alike.
Sometimes, Erin surprised herself with her still-sound mind. The many adversity she had to overcome to attend the title of Sword Saint, it never amounted to the many meaningless deaths in her journey. It shook her resolve every time.
Nevertheless, she steeled her nerves and calmed her heart. She had a job to do and if left undone, only more meaningless deaths would accumulate.
âFocus, Erin. Focus.â
The questâs objectives were to investigate the disappearance of the two adventurers and to identify and subjugate the threat that was plaguing the village. At a glance of the villageâs condition, Erin knew they would be here for quite some time. Amongst these deaths, it would be hard to even make out the contour of their shadows, much less finding a clue for their objectives. As for the subjugating part, Erin doubted that was something she could even accomplish with her current level of abilities.
âThis is terrible.â Even Freed, who could no longer hide behind his aloof facade, voiced out his horror in a hollow tone.
âNo shit,â Lyra retorted.
Erin had her fairshares of bloodsheds and wars but this was something she could never have a straight face for. The feeling of helplessnessâ like these villages must have feltâ she hated it. She hated and feared being powerless. She believed this notion to be one of the main factors that drove her obsession into becoming the Sword Saint.
Turning her eye away from the horrifying sight, Lyra furrowed her brows. âThat poor girl⦠I canât imagine the things she had seen.â
âAny survivors?â Freed asked as he looked around, already with his sword drawn.
Erin cast Life Sense but the results turned up null. The only lives she could pick up were of the crows and rats feasting on the rotten flesh. Erin shook her head in response. âNothing but crows and rats.â
Lyraâs face turned gloom. âDoes that mean Marcus and his companion didnât make it?â
âWhat do you think?â Freed shouted with an exaggerated gesture. âOf course theyâre dead! Look around you! Do you think they could handle this number of monsters?!â
Lyra locked eyes with him, jabbing a finger at his chest. âWe donât know that.â
âLyraâs right,â Erin said. âWe canât confirm their status until we find their body.â
Freed pointed at a corpse strewn nearby. âLook at that body. I canât even tell if itâs a man or a woman. What makes you think we can find their bodies?â
âThat is one of the quest objectives,â answered Erin with a resolute tone and expression.
âObjectives?â Freed canted his head.
It took Erin a few seconds to realize Freed failed to get her meaning. âIt means goal, as in the aim of this quest.â
âYou Faerie-kin sure use some fancy words.â
Erin ignored his remark and continued to scour the razed village. With her amplified sense of smell and hearing, it was even harder for her to bear than the average human. It was at times like this that she viewed these gifts of hers as a cross she had to bear.
âAll is not lost⦠there has to be someone alive⦠or something that could help us, to point us to the culprit.â
Despite all evidence to the contrary, Erin remained hopeful that they would find something auspicious even in the slightest among the ruins. However, that was only a faint glimmer. The more she looked, the more despair she felt in having such wishful thinking. No matter where she looked, there was no corner left untouched by the slaughtering. Even the secret spaces beneath the floorboards were carved out by something big. The worst part was that these places were mostly filled with the corpses of infants and children, half-eaten.
âHalf-eaten?â Erin questioned. She looked around to confirm her suspicions and it did.
The monsters didnât attack this village to fill their belly, this quickly became Erinâs conjecture. Although not many corpses were in one piece, the fact that so many bits and pieces laid strewn about, spoke volume of the monstersâ intention. The monsters didnât slaughter the villagers for food but for sports.
Erin coiled her fingers into a fist tightly. âEven if I donât find Marcus or William, I will find the monsters who did this and kill all of them,â she vowed in her heart.
âIt really is Goblins...â Lyra mused as she inspected the peculiar footprints the entire villageâs soil was littered with. The footprints had the shape of a small foot with four toes with each slightly pointed crooked.
âWhat about these ones?â Freed pointed at footprints of similar outline but twice the size.
âHobgoblins,â Erin was the one who answered.
âWell, fuck a duck,â Freed uttered. His eyes bounced from between the dozen footprints and counted the numbers. âThatâs a lot of Hobgoblins.â
âNot just Goblins.â Lyra pointed at sets of pawprints. âSerks and Dire Wolves.â
âSerks and Dire Wolves? I thought these two donât get along?â Freed questioned.
âEvidently, they do now,â Erin said. âLooks like the Goblins have tamed them to suit their uses, or something else did.â
âWhoa thereâ Goblins have pets?â Freed dropped his jaws. âThis is the first time I hear about this.â
âItâs mine too.â Erin sighed. âThis is not even the worst thing we need to worry about.â
âThen what is?â
Erin gestured with her head to a ruined two storey building. Just around the area, there were footprints five times the size of the average human footprint.
âFucking hell,â Freed gasped. âWhat manner of creature is of that size? Four toes⦠crooked... some sort of Goblin variant?â
Lyra walked over to the over-sized footprints and gave a closer look. âThe tip of the toes are curved instead of pointed. Itâs not a Goblin. No Goblin variants have ever reached this size.â Lyra turned to Erin. âWhat do you think it is?â
âOff the top of my head, a Troll,â Erin answered.
Colors were drained from Freedâs face. He let out a nervous laugh. âYouâre pulling my leg here, right? P-please tell me you are. P-please?â
Lyra rolled her eyes at Freedâs declining behavior.
Erin gave a quick glance at the trees that bordered the village. She saw none of the branches were broken or disturbed. âThe trolls are not more than sixteen feet.â
âAnd h-how tall is that?â Freed asked.
Erin sighed. âNo taller than the trees around us. Otherwise, the Troll would have disturbed the branches in its travels.â
âSo we have Goblins, Hobgoblins, Serks, Dire Wolves, and a Troll,â Lyra laughed ironically. âTrolls hate Goblins. Serks and Dire Wolves are natural enemies. Goblins donât work well with other species. But here we have evidence that pointed to all of the contrary. What kind of joke is this?â
âThe kind that killed off an entire village for sports,â Erin responded. âOr for some other reasons?â
âWhatâs that?â Freed pointed over the twoâs heads.
They turned around to follow where his finger led their sight to. They found a ceramic pot dangling on frail-looking ropes a few feet above ground. The ropes were tied to a nearby pole for support. The pot itself was oozing out an unsettling feeling towards them.
âWhat is that?â Lyra asked the same question. âSome kind of alarm?â
âLooks like it,â Erin agreed but as she appraised the pot, she had a change of opinion. The contents of the pot were something called; Miasma: Liquid Essence. From the description, it was mainly used for dark rituals as catalysts. âHuh⦠itâs Miasma but in liquid form.â
âWhy is something so ominous dangling in the middle of nowhere?â Lyra questioned with a frown.
âItâs mostly used for dark rituals,â Erin relayed the information to the two. âSo Iâm guessing whoever or whatever is responsible for this village massacre, they might have done it for the purpose of a ritual.â
âMonsters are conducting a ritual?â Lyraâs eyes widened. âSince when are Goblins capable of such things?â
âObviously, weâre not dealing with your average Goblins, or Goblins at allâ
âOh godâ¦â Lyra gasped. âwhat have we trod upon?â
âI wish I knew too.â
âErin, I think we should leave,â Lyra suggested. âI have a really bad feeling about all this.â
âWhat are you talking about?â Freed turned to Lyra and threw her a glare. âWe have yet to eliminate the monsters responsible for all of this.â
âMaybe we shouldnât. I donât like the look of things.â
âAre you suggesting we should abandon the quest just because you have a bad feeling?â
âYes, thatâs what Iâm suggesting.â Lyra returned the glare.
âWe'll fail the quest if we return without doing anything!â Freed shouted. âGolds are the stakes here.â
âLook around you! Does this look normal to you? Do you think whatever is happening here is worth gold? Thereâs a goddamn ritual in place. We are not prepared for this.â
Freed scoffed. âA ritual? Says who? That vixen? Who knows if sheâs not just spouting nonsense just to keep up her vanity? Sheâs a Fae!â
Lyra furrowed her brows in anger. âThese are Goblinsâ footprints. Goblins were here. Goblins donât kill for sport. If theyâre not looking for food, theyâre looking for broodmares. Look around you, damn it! They killed even the women too. They didnât even leave the women alive for breeding. They are not looking for food or broodmares. And thereâs a fucking pot of miasma in the middle of the village, dangling suspiciously on thin ropes! What more obvious fucking clues you need before you realize we are out of our boundaries here!â
âFuck off with your shivering cunt, lily. Just because of these assumptions youâre thinking about abandoning the quest? Have they told you how much weâll be getting for this quest?â
A vein bulged on her brows. âI am aware but I donât care. These coins are useless if Iâm not alive to spend it.â
âYou are unbelievable, woman.â
âI agreed with Lyra,â Erin chimed in with a calm voice after a deep cerebration. âI think weâre overreaching here with our abilities.â
âOverreaching?â Freed scoffed. âI never thought I would ever hear that from a Fae.â
Erin groaned in frustration. âIt ainât just about me, you idiot. I donât want to hurt your frail ego but whatever is out there waiting for us, youâre not ready for it; we are not ready for it.â
Freed clicked his tongue. Without a word, he began treading over to the pot that was brimming with Miasma.
âWhat are you going?â asked Lyra.
âIâm going to destroy that stupid thing that seems to be plaguing the minds of you two.â Without a care to where he stepped, he made his way to the pot without sparing the two a glance.
It was Lyraâs turn to groan her frustration. âThat idiot, heâs going toââ
Suddenly, Erin felt a chill down her spine as her Sixth Sense began screaming.
[Sixth Sense activated. Ominous Threat detected.]
Erin shouted, âFreed! Donât take anotherââ
But it was too late.
He planted his foot down onto the soil in front of him, snapping off a thin string that was hidden by the blood, flesh, and dirt. The snapped string set off a chain reaction, one that even Freed took notice. He could do nothing but watch the contraption unfolded before him. The contraption ended with the rope around the pot coming off.Â
Erin put her all into Fleet Foot and dashed past Freed in an instant and straight for the pot. However, she was too slow. The pot broke into fragments as it touched the ground, spilling out its contents. The Miasma liquid oozed out from its broken receptacle.
Lyra paled at the sight. âOh god⦠you stupid son of aââ
âFuck you! How should I know there would be a trap? Theyâre just Goblins.â
âThe village was scattered with portent! What the fuck do you think!?â
âSilence, you two!â Erin shouted. âCease this stupid quarrel. Stay vigilant. Something big is coming.â
As soon as Erin said that, the Miasma liquid flowed unnaturally throughout the ground, tracing a specific path until it began to form into an ominous symbol.
âOi oi! Shouldnât we stop the flow of that black liquid of whatever it is before it completesâ whatever the hell itâs doing?â Freed asked, panicking.
âItâs dark magic weâre dealing with here. Youâre welcome to try stopping it if youâre that brave.â
âOh shut up, I was just suggesting,â Freed retorted.
Erin paid no heed to the argument and stayed her eyes on the Miasma flow. She activated Spirit Sight in hopes to see what she couldnât with her naked eyes. Her hunch paid off. Trails of black smoke was dispelled from the ominous symbol. The black smokes found their way into the corpses and carcasses nearby.
With her skin crawling, Erin appraised the corpses and carcasses. The status which read; Deceased was slowly turning into Reanimated (Spellbound) and their race was replaced by Ghoul.
âOi oi! What the fuck!? What the fuck!? Arenât they supposed to be dead?â Freed exclaimed as he pointed frantically at the slowly rising corpses and carcasses.
On a reflex of their experience as adventurers, they quickly formed a circle with their backs to one another. Lyra almost let out a squeal when she felt Erinâs tails touching her back. Freed on the other hand was much too focused on the Ghouls to give any thoughts to Erinâs tails. Erin herself was aware but the situation in front of her took precedence.
âI wonder who do we have to thank for this?â Lyra muttered dryly as she nocked an arrow.
âOh quit it, would you!? That was an accident.â Freed brandished his sword at the rising Ghouls with a trembling grip.
âErin, what do we do?â Lyra asked.
âI say we run butââ From where she stood, Erin could see their way out of here was already thwarted by the Ghouls which were already clogging up the path with their rising numbers. ââthat option is out of the window. Which leaves us to only one option.â
âAnd whatâs that?â
âWhat else?â Erin drew both of her swords, the broadsword in her right hand and the saber in her left. She conjured up Arcane Armor just slightly on the tip of her tails, enough to slit through oneâs throat. âWe stand our ground and fight.â