"This is the last stage of your training, Adam."
"I-I..."
"You want to be strong, don't you, my little knight?"
OOO
Growing up, I was just a sickly child that spent most of his time indoors, helping around our little house. My parents were afraid that my already weak body might give out if I strained it too much. I was always envious of the guys who left to join the army from a young age, apprentice at the local blacksmith, or even just work the fieldsâbut whenever I tried to join in on any of those activities, I'd always end up laid up in bed with a fever afterwards, out of commission for days.
I didn't get to meet Aries when she first arrived at the village, since I was laid up in bed with one of those very fevers at the time. According to the other villagers, she just showed up one dayâanother face in a small crowd of travelers that would occasionally pass through the area. However, the monster attack on our village gave her an opportunity to show just how unique she really was.
The rise of the new Overlord brought with her a wave of monsters that were much more human-like in appearance. Not just humanoidâthey appear to be all-female, and incredibly beautiful. Don't let their humanoid appearance lull you into a false sense of security, though. They were more aggressive and intelligent than ever, and they seemed hell-bent on pillaging towns and kidnapping men with an almost manic glee.
We were a relatively remote town, with nothing more than a monster den several miles away whose denizens generally kept to themselves until now. What's more, we were nestled deep within our nationâwe feared no bandits, no incursion from outside nations, no roving monsters, and consequently saw no need to have any real defenses. The band of monster girls crashed into our town with only minimal resistance. Orc women, towering over our tallest men; women with bat wings for arms swooping down and raping men in the streets-it was a nightmare. They didn't even have weaponsâthe few men who had blades handy to swing at them found them easily batted out of their grasp.
My own house was attackedâthe front door easily reduced to splinters. I found myself hoisted over the bare shoulder of some orc woman. She was half way out of the village with me when Aries stopped her. With a large piece of timberâpossibly the splintered crossbeam of a wagon, she bludgeoned every monster that tried to leave the village. Precise stabs and slashes with her makeshift weapon forced the monsters to drop their quarry and scurry back off into the night. Some didn't have the privilege of getting to limp awayâI remember a good few satisfying crunches as she smacked the bat-winged women out of the air and they crumpled like tissue paper, only to be scooped up by their orc friends that still had functioning hands as they made their retreat.
Once all the dust had settled and all of the monsters had been routed, she called everyone in the town together. Although I think everyone would have congregated around her anyway in amazement and curiosity after the display they witnessed. I was exhausted from my ordeal, and had only just managed to drag myself up from where I'd fallen when she started lecturing the village.
"You people are the most pitiful bunch I've yet encountered on my travels. Here we are, the new Overlord on the rise, monsters on the prowl, and you have done nothing! This may be a more secluded village, but surely you've heard of what is happening out there? Surely you weren't so naĂŻve as to think it would never come to your doorstep? Yet you crumple like wheat beneath a storm when a mere rabble of these kids comes through."
The townsfolk had the decency to look sheepish at her words. But what were they to do? They'd never had to fight regular monsters, let alone these new creatures.
"If you hope to keep your lives the next time they come 'roundâand those girls
will
come again, mark my wordsâthen you must strengthen yourselves," she said.
The villagers' collective pride was injured. A single girl in light clothing was calling them weak, and lecturing them like a displeased Sunday school teacher, and they could say nothing. Indeed, what were their options? In their small town naivety, many of them thought their strength equated to prowess in battle, but when faced with a truly alien threat that wasn't cowed by bluster and sword rattling, they found themselves virtually powerless. Their wounds were fresh and their egos still humbled, yet they couldn't just tuck their tails between their legs and run to the relative safety of the citiesâtheir whole lives were here.
"Luckily for you all I love a good project. I'll train you all and whip up a fighting force that can help repel at least the casual bands of monsters like this one. Once you guys prove you won't go down easily, smaller groups like that will be more wary of approaching your village directly. Who will step forward to help?" She looked around expectantly.
I don't think anyone there doubted her combat prowess after seeing it firsthand, but lingering shame or pride held the villagers back from volunteering. This was obviously not what she expected, and I swore I could see a spark of fiery annoyance flit across her amber eyes.
"I volunteer..." I raised a shaky hand. Probably a combination of an adrenaline crash coming on and my already weakened body. "You saved my life back there. There was nothing I could do-it was because I'm so weak. I'm sick of being helpless...if you can help me get stronger, even just a little bit, I'll do anything."
That dark look vanished immediately when she turned to look at me, leaving behind only a warm red glow in her eyes that enveloped me. I was afraid she would scoff when she saw me, frail as I was, but instead she almost purred. "Hmm... You have spirit that doesn't match that shellâI can work with that. What is your name, boy?"
"Adam."
She leaned in to get a closer look at me, giving me a clear view down her low-necked tunic that my eyes followed unconsciously. All that womanly charm on display for a guy that hadn't had many opportunities to interact with the opposite sex was a bit too much. "Huhu, yes, I can work with you alright," she whispered. Her fingers trailed down from my ear to my chin, and it felt like time had frozen all around us. "What do you say, my little knight? Will you be my number one?"
"Y-yes ma'am!" I said, a little overeagerly.
She smiled, a small smile that I knew right there was private, just for me, and then turned to face the crowd, her grin turning more mischievous.
"You see that, you whimpering bunch? This young one stepped up before any of you! You aren't going to let him lay bare your cowardice like that, are you?"
That good-natured ribbing finally knocked the townsfolk out of their stuporâmany of the men and even a few women ended up volunteering right then and there.
Aries carved a niche for herself with that, training up a militia for the village. I would have thought the headstrong men would be loath to follow the orders of a woman in such things, but whether it was her actions that day or the way she seemed to effortlessly command a crowd's attentionâshe never had anyone directly challenge her authority. That might be partially due to how tight a shift she ranâanyone that got out of line or tried to shirk their daily duties got fixed with her dark glare. And the really dense ones got a walloping from a wooden training sword.
I managed to avoid drawing her ire, somehow. Despite having to take frequent breaks and even fainting once or twice early on, Aries never once seemed annoyed. Quite the opposite, offering me water and a place to sit and catch my breath. I expected to at least get called out on it (and even her preferential treatment) by the other people in the group, but they seemed to regard me with even more apathy than usual. All the while, I couldn't shake that feeling I had when Aries first looked straight into my eyes. Not a single person who had been there mentioned it, not even my parents, even though I was sure I'd get all sorts of ribbing over it. In that single private moment in front of all of those people, it felt like I'd been ensorcelled.
"Adamâ"
And ever since, I feel like I've been in a weird world, overlapping the one everyone else was in, yet separate. Much like the one I'd been in before when I was isolated at home all the time, but with one key difference.
"Adam, everyone's already packed up and leftâare you asleep down there or what? Do I need you carry you back home like I did the last time you fainted?"