MTO C69
by berryChapter 69
Kaidan pulled a book from the shelf and opened it on the central table. In his hands it had seemed ordinary, but set on the surface it was so large it covered more than half the tabletop. On the left page was a finely detailed illustration of a monster; on the right, a description of its traits. It was a bestiary.
He turned to a page and pointed at the illustration. Michel had seen this monster before.
âNaga. The one that showed up in the woods near the orphanage. One of the monsters commonly found on the Northern Continent.â
At the words âNorthern Continent,â Michel recalled the map of this world from the childrenâs storybooks. People here believed the world was made of three continents. The kingdom of Formene lay on the northernmost land, hence âNorthern Continent.â There, many large and small kingdoms and cityâstates clustered together, among which the most expansive and influential was the Kingdom of Formene.
The thought that the same serpent monster heâd met before prowled the land he now lived on did not sit well.
âAs you know from seeing it yourself, a naga is a serpent monster with three heads. It usually constricts prey with its body to suffocate it, or shoots paralytic venom from its tail, then eats it after it dies. If stung by a nagaâs tail, the body soon hardens like stone and death follows.â
As Kaidan continued the explanation, Michel shuddered. He had nearly died from naga venom; it was a memory he never wanted to relive.
âLuckily, I survived.â
âBecause the antidote was given in time. But the antidote itself has severe side effects. A raging fever grips the whole body for days. So someone must watch by the patientâs side until they wake and help draw the venom out.â
âHow do you draw it out?â
Michel asked, brightâeyed. Kaidan flinched. He opened his mouth as if to answer, then shut it. For a split second his gaze brushed Michelâs lips. Before Michel could register that subtle shift, Kaidan had already glanced away.
ââŠIf youâre fortunate, most of it leaves naturally.â
Only after a long pause did he answer, voice lowered. Michel decided the library must be dusty today.
âGuess I was fortunate.â
ââŠYou were. The side effects leave some people blind.â
Michel sucked in a breath. Looking back, it was a blessing the naga had stung him, not Heart. A child that small would have struggled even more with the antidoteâs side effects.
âThen how should one fight a naga?â
Kaidan tapped the middle head of the naga.
âCut here and it dies instantly. The left and right heads or the body will regenerate after a while no matter how much you cut. If you find a naga, sever the central head immediately, or cut the tail to remove its attack, then take all the heads.â
âIs there any other way besides cutting?â
âYou can crush the head, or burn it to death. The key is to stop the central head.â
Michel studied the illustration with a grave face.
Could a downward smash pulp it? When heâd kicked it, the body had been extremely tough.
He was not yet comfortable with a sword and pondered whether taekwondo offered a way to deal with a naga. Bareâhanded against a monster seemed unwise, but in a pinch, it might be worth trying.
If worst comes to worst, pick up a boulder and throw it.
âDonât worry too much. Any knight in the Eglence corps can dispatch a naga easily. As long as you have an escort, a monster wonât get you.â
Seeing Michel deep in thought, Kaidan, perhaps misunderstanding, soothed him. Michel smiled and nodded. Kaidan overprotected the Saint; there was no need to confess heâd been thinking up ways to kill a monster with his own hands.
Once naga was covered, Kaidan turned the page. The next monster resembled a gorilla, but its body hair was white, and sharkâlike teeth jutted past its lips.
âYeti. Even the smallest is bigger than three grown men combined. Itâs said to live deep in snowy mountains, but sometimes comes down to rob traveling merchants. Its weak points areâŠâ
He pointed: eyes, throat, groin. With a humanlike body plan, its vulnerabilities were similar.
âBut if you ever meet a yeti, donât provoke itâhide nearby. If you leave its sight, it gives up the hunt; lazy thing. Try to fight, and it will pulp you with arms like iron.â
Michel imagined himself gripped in a yetiâs hands, popping like a balloon. Not a pleasant thought.
This is hard.
Unlike the naga, which seemed manageable, the yeti felt impossible even knowing its weak points. If it was bigger than three men, how could one reach those targets?
Then a story came to mind; he looked at Kaidan.
âIs it true David can take down ten yeti alone?â
Kaidan frowned as if to say âWhat are you talking about?â then gave a short verdict.
âWell⊠for David, perhaps.â
âWoooow!â
Michel was unguardedly impressed. He had thought the âten yetiâ claim was one of Davidâs tall tales as usual. If true, it cast David in a new light. Heâd seemed friendly only because he played with the orphansâbut he was, after all, a knight worthy of serving as deputy captain of Eglenceâs corps.
âDavidâs amazing! Next time I see him Iâll ask how he did it.â
ââŠYou donât use an honorific for David.â
At that stray remark, Michel tilted his head. It felt oddly out of the blue. Then, realizing Kaidan might be correcting his manners, he hurried to explain.
âHe said I could call him by name. He told me it was fine to keep it casual if he gave permission.â
âI see.â
Kaidan fell quiet, staring at the illustration. Michel was puzzledâdid yeti stir a bad memory?
âWhen itâs just us, you can call me by my name too.â
After a while, he spoke softly. The opposite of his usual stance, and Michel didnât take it at face value. Why the sudden change? Was this a test of etiquette?
âI speak casually to you too.â
That made sense; being the only one addressed with honorifics must have felt awkward. Heâd even startled Michel by using formal speech when they were alone at the orphanage. Suspicion eased, Michel grinned.
âThen I will, Kaidan.â
âGood.â
âHow many yeti can you take?â
âLetâs see⊠fifty, perhapsâŠâ
Kaidanâs eyes focused on the air. Michelâs jaw dropped at the offhand answer.
âRâreally?â
ââŠMaybe more.â
âWow, a true Sword Master!â
When Michel clapped and fussed, Kaidan coughed low. Perhaps from the chill, the edges of his ears flushed red. When Michel suggested adding wood if he was cold, Kaidan himself stoked the fireplace.
If thereâs ever a yeti hunt, Iâll ask to go watch.
While Kaidan tended the fire, Michel vowed. Meeting monsters was dangerous, but with the Eglence corps, there was nothing to fear. Studying them in books was good; watching knights dispatch them would be an even better lesson.
Who knows? One day he might take down a yeti himself.
Noâdream big. With hard training, ten might be within reach.
For someone who had sworn never to face monsters again, he found himself grinning at the image of himself flattening yeti.
Kaidanâs monster lesson continued. He proved a surprisingly kind, thorough teacher. He focused more on safe escape than on fighting, but answered every question diligently.
Even Michel, who disliked sitting at a desk, found Kaidanâs talk so fascinating time slipped away. If âmonsterologyâ had been taught at school instead of math and English, he might have been top of the class.
A bell pealed outside, making him jump up in a flurry. Eglence rang six times daily to mark the hours. Michel taught the children taekwondo between the morning and noon bells.
âOh wow, itâs late already. Can we continue next time? Iâm scheduled to watch the kids now.â
âYouâre teaching a martial arts class?â
âYes, taekwondo.â
He answered reflexively, then checked Kaidanâs face, worried heâd be scolded for exerting himself. But Kaidan closed the book instead of frowning.
âIâd like to see what kind of lesson it is.â
âHuh? Want to come now?â
âIâll see to it..â
He stood at once, as if heâd been waiting. Heâd been so busy lately Michel rarely saw him; oddly, today he was free.
Must be a little bored.
Michel hid a smile and led the way. The thought of a longâawaited observation day made his heart beat pleasantly fast.