The Mook Maker (LitRPG / Isekai / Original / May Contain Furries)

The Mook Maker (LitRPG / Isekai / Original / May Contain Furries)
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An original LitRPG / Fantasy / Isekai.

There are many possible fates that can await those whisked away from our world to another.
Some became heroes or villains, given the right power to forge their own destinies as they wished.
Others, the powerless, became victims, doomed to perish, at the mercy of the cruel world filled with mystical powers they are unprepared for.
A lone man that woke up alone under the alien sky was neither of those.
He didn't get to choose what he was going to become - a disaster, an unwilling source of intelligent, yet violent monsters, slowly but steadily rising in numbers. Stranded in a foreign land, without even knowing the language, his creations may be the only company he would ever find.
He wasn't powerless. But was he really that much better off?
It just took one wrong power.
Introduction

beast_regards

[Censored]
Location
Valid Location
Beast_regards presents an Original LitRPG Novel.




There are many possible fates that can await those whisked away from our world to another.
Some became heroes or villains, given the right power to forge their own destinies as they wished.
Others, the powerless, became victims, doomed to perish, at the mercy of the cruel world filled with mystical powers they are unprepared for.
A lone man that woke up alone under the alien sky was neither of those.
He didn't get to choose what he was going to become - a disaster, an unwilling source of intelligent, yet violent monsters, slowly but steadily rising in numbers. Stranded in a foreign land, without even knowing the language, his creations may be the only company he would ever find.
He wasn't powerless. But was he really that much better off?
It just took one wrong power.



*) This novel may contain a slight trace of furries. The most common symptoms of allergy include sweating, rash, smashing the report button and shouting random lines from the repertoire of Imperial Inquisitor.
 
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Chapter 1: Go Forth and Multiply!
I didn't know how it ended.

But it began anew on a cold stone floor under the blue sky.

The dreadful, chilly sensation quickly forced me to get on my feet, even before my groggy mind allowed me to consider what was going on, where I was and‌ why.

I was on a paved clearing - a large slab covered with carved runes forming nondescript, yet intricate patterns, surrounded by the dilapidated stone ruins almost entirely consumed by the forest around.

My home was gone. Everything was gone, and I did not know what happened.

But I did not have the chance to think about how ridiculous the whole situation was.

Even before I could guess whether this was a bad dream, it immediately became even crazier.


Choose Your First Element

Almost as an insult to the complete insanity of this situation, a bland black and white window appeared in front of my eyes.

I waved it away. It wasn't like I knew I could wave it away I just helplessly flailed against it in shock and it disappeared.

Disoriented and confused, alone in the unfamiliar environment, I looked around again, only to be alerted by a scream, a female voice, then two warriors that looked like they came out of an Asian period drama, dressed in lamellar armour, with their short swords drawn - and covered by blood - advanced towards me.

Unwilling to test whether this was real or some nightmare, I banished the thoughts of the absurdity of the situation, turned on my heel, and ran, ignoring the fact I had no boots and movement on the cracking, carved rock hurt my feet.

I didn't get far, anyway.

Whatever this strange stone structure was, it stood at the edge of a cliff, and I barely stopped in time, with mere centimetres standing between me and plummeting down into the foggy depths. I backed away. My heart rate spiked up and my head started spinning. I was terrified of heights.

Choose Your First Element


The status screen was back, almost as if it was taunting me.

I think the two not-quite-Chinese warriors taunted me as well, or at least I felt they did as they shouted something, but I didn't understand their language. They seemed entertained by the fact I almost fell to my death and took their time to approach me, with almost sadistic grins on their faces. Perhaps they expected me to jump down the cliff rather than face them.

Choose Your First Element

The screen was back, insisting I make a choice I didn't quite understand. Without a chance to think that through, I shouted "Fire!" in desperation.

Shockingly enough, it did something, even not what I imagined it might.

Skill "Scorched Earth lvl.1" Gained.

From an outburst of the bloody mist erupting from the ground, a fur-covered humanoid figure formed, fiery sparkles dancing around the rusty mane and bushy tail. The swordsmen suddenly paused. The creature giggled, and with a gesture of its clawed hands released a flaming bolt towards the closest warrior.

The soldier was hit straight in the face and screamed in pain, dropping his weapon and clawing his burned face, just to be drowned in the burst of continuous flame the monster directed at him. He wailed as he burned. The second warrior threw away his sword and ran, but the furry creature lobbed a few fireballs after him, and he too ended up burning, and dead.

Paralyzed in shock, all my senses were assaulted by the gruesome display, along with the disgusting stench of the burning flesh.

Skill "Scorched Earth lvl.2" Gained.

Another, albeit smaller, but similarly shaped creature, materialised out of another puff of red smoke.

It was greeted by the rain of arrows from the treeline. The smaller creature jumped in front of me, shielding me from the barrage, then fell down, coughing out blood from the wooden shaft piercing its throat and a few other arrows sticking out of the body. No more shots came through, as the larger furry monster swept the possible hiding spots with its fire attacks, setting the bushes ablaze.

Still dumbfounded, or rather terrified, I stared at the dying one. It looked like an anthropomorphic wolf or a fox, with yellow, red, white, and black fur patterns. It looked at me, and it seemed almost as if it was smiling despite many sustained injuries.

The moment it finally passed away and dissolved into the red cloud that gave it life, a new one formed to replace it.

Another lone arrow whizzed above my head, narrowly missing.

I couldn't bring myself to do anything despite the obvious danger, overwhelmed by the whole situation unfolding, and froze.

The newly spawned creature didn't have this problem. It followed the projectile with its eyes, then probably figured out where it came from.

As a retaliation, a bolt of fire detonated among the greenery that might have hidden the attackers, which caused more movement from the scorching inferno that enveloped the forest's border as the archer behind that shot tried to break free.

The little monster glanced back at me, and then, with one large leap, it was off, probably to chase the unseen enemies.

"For Master!"

The fact it could speak, or rather yell, in a quiet girlish sounding voice startled me even more.

A larger one seemed satisfied with setting the forest line of fire, looked back at me, then caught movement among the conflagration of bushes it helped to create, and charged after the potential enemies that escaped the flames.

They were still around; I thought. I heard the voices, even if I didn't comprehend what they were saying or shouting. More fiery explosions and more pained screams soon interrupted them.

Skill "Scorched Earth lvl.3" Gained.

A new announcement, a new creature appearing, following the lead of the first two.

I still could do nothing, disoriented and confused.

Monsters, however, had a great time. The giggling, high-pitched voices giggling among the fiery blasts must be theirs.

"For Master! For Master!" I heard them repeating, as a chant, or a battle cry.

I stumbled forward. Away from the cliff side, a mere glimpse of heights gave me shivers, even if danger probably came from another direction.

More screaming, more fire followed, and I still had zero ideas about what was going on. Then there was silence.

Skill "Scorched Earth lvl.4" Gained.

The haze spitted out yet another creature, the fourth one so far, once again the same as the previous one.

I fell to my knees in the middle of the stone clearing where I first woke up. Shellshocked, shaking, I just stared forward. It wasn't like I could do anything, as it seems some unseen power was simply throwing more beasts into the fray with no further input from my side.

The latest of the spawned, the same canine or vulpine-like humanoid, like the others, stared at me with curiosity.

"Master?" it asked, tilting its head. She asked - I corrected myself - as the voice had a clearly feminine tone to it. Her words were more though, echoing in my mind in a way sound did not.

I said nothing. I couldn't.

Another creature popped out of the ruby cloud, this time without any notification.

Then, another sword-wielding human charged out of the blazing bushes, unbothered by the crackling fire, weapon raised.

It happened so fast.

She-monsters didn't wait and released the torrent of fire before they charged the human. This time, their opponent was harder than others, and swings of his long curved blade cut and deflected the blazing wave, in blatant defiance of physics. The monsters fought with their claws, but the terrifying, supernaturally powerful warrior dispatched them with brutal efficiency, decapitating them.

Blood splashed all around, and sheer brutality left me in shock, but the two of the remaining spawns appeared from the woods and didn't hesitate to press their attack. A small one died quickly after fearlessly leaping against the human, distracting him from raising his deadly blade against me.

This horrifying dream would not end, no matter how much I wanted to scream at it.

The largest version of the furry creatures used her barrage of fireballs to close the distance, forcing him to use his undoubtedly unnatural moves to parry all of those, cutting what shouldn't be possible to cut. Eventually, despite being put on the defensive, he drove his blade through the larger humanoid monster's abdomen. It wasn't the end.

His victory turned hollow as the pyrokinetic vulpine pulled herself forward, impaling herself further on the blade, grabbing the now surprised and struggling warrior. She chuckled as the energies lit on her claws, and with her last breath, she released the blast of her magical fire in one blazing detonation. I was swept by the blast of fiery heat and was forced to look away.

When my eyes wandered back, I was immediately sickened by the torn body of the nameless warrior. Only his lower body remained torn and scorched, the rest blown apart and scattered to pieces, or disintegrated in the blast. Everything smelled of death, blood, and scorched wood and flesh alike.

The bodies of the monsters were already dissolving into that ruby mist that spawned them.

Gory scenery made me sick, turning my stomach upside down.

Uncaring about my shaken mental state, the damned window appeared once again with an triumphant announcement I couldn't care about in my current miserable situation.

Skill "Scorched Earth lvl.5" gained.
]Skill "Scorched Earth lvl.6" gained.
Major Enemy killed. Level 2 achieved. Unit cap doubles.

I had barely read everything before the cursed fog birthed another set of furry monsters, in even greater numbers. Now there were over ten of them, including one larger and several of the smaller kind, the same or similar to those that perished before my very eyes a mere moment ago.

They surrounded me, looking around at the destruction and death around, and laughed in their silly, girlish voices, reverberating through my mind like a thousand little needles. I could feel their satisfaction and joy at a job well done.

The biggest of them, the exact copy of the first one spawned when I was thrown into this madness, lowered herself to me. In her playful, feminine voice that didn't quite fit the animalistic face, she asked,

"The enemies are dead. What now, Master?"
 
Chapter 2: The Root of All Evil
"What is going on?"

I uttered the only sentence, the only question, my struggling mind was able to put out.

"I don't know, Master."

Monster answered, slightly tilting her head as she leaned over me.

"Who are you?"

It was the second thing I asked, without thinking. I wasn't capable of any meaningful conversation at that moment.

"I am yours, Master," the monster replied, calmly, with its voice at odds with its form. It - she, I corrected myself - had some feminine curves despite the fur-covered body standing on her hind legs. Her hands had grasping fingers tipped with sharp claws. Mostly red-ish in colouring, with the yellow highlight of her head and fluffy collar, her hair was almost gleaming, as befitting of the fiery fox motif she had. Her fluffy tail wagged left and right releasing little sparks.

I stared. This situation was ultimately alien to me, all that death, all that fire, it was all like a bad dream I silently prayed to end. It didn't.

She-monster was however quite comfortable with my gaze and patiently waited, only slightly throwing her red mane around, smiling in the best equivalent of human facial expression the short canine snout could provide.

Her smaller kin, generally looking like the younger, smaller variant of her with different colouration, were however obviously getting bored and wandered around. Two played with the swords they picked up, trying to set the blades' metal tips ablaze with their powers. They found it obviously amusing as they giggled sillily, others wandered off to the forest where the fires they caused slowly subsided.

A larger one seemed to be content with looking at me, only moving slightly closer. She smelled like burned aromatic wood.

Moments passed. Then something within me finally gave away and forced me to do something.

"Why do you stare at me like that?" I said.

"You created me. I dare say you are the most important person in my life right now," she replied, in a slightly sultry tone. I still couldn't get used to the fact that she did have quite a normal, if not even pleasant, human-like voice, but the anthropomorphic canine body. I had a nagging sensation that her voice wasn't even a sound, and rather this strange feeling reverberating within my brain, her mouth however did move when she spoke though.

The awkward moment was interrupted by her smaller variant.

"For Master!" Mini-monster announced in her annoyingly childish tone and presented me with a pair of boots, only slightly charred on the edges.

Bodies, I realized, they looted the bodies. It was a dire reminder of the events that just transpired.

I suddenly became aware of the gruesome surroundings and all the stench around I somehow ignored it for the short, blissfully dulled moment.

Unable to take any of it anymore, I backpedalled then I jumped on my feet and ran into the woods, ignoring the creatures, burnt vegetation, lashing branches or scorched corpses left in the wake of the monster's rampage. There were more of them than those whose death I witnessed.
Eventually, I just collapsed on the decaying cobbled road that cut through the forest, unable to move as my foot hurt, bruised from the ordeal of running through the forest, barefoot. I looked around, breathing heavily, and I had no idea where I was, what I should do, and what the hell was going on. My feet were stung and hurt, bleeding from embedded pieces of sharp, tiny rocks, but ironically, it kept me in reality, no matter how insane it was. A subtle reminder this wasn't a dream.

The forest was silent, tense, for a little while. Perhaps it was afraid, scared of predators stalking around. Or it was just my lack of experience with the wilderness and not being accustomed to waking up in the middle of nowhere. I blame it on the latter. No one could have been prepared for his.

Then a few loud blasts echoed around the woods startling the remaining birds that were too foolish to not flee during the madness that transpired when I woke up here.

It may be too late for them, as a burning bird crashed down to the ground. Then I heard the giggling.

A smaller version of those vulpine devils appeared carrying the half-chewed chicken, or something very similar to it. It rushed for its prey laying scorched and crashed, picked that up and then offered it to me.

"For Master!" It quipped and smiled, its muzzle covered in blood. Or she, they did all have feminine voices after all.

"I'll … pass," I said, and shook a little. I was uncomfortable but helpless. She seemed disappointed by my refusal, and I stayed silent. The monster looked at me, and I looked at the monster, she tore a bit of meat from her catch in another weird moment.

I didn't have to watch the not-quite-fox gnawing on the bird for too long though as her larger, and significantly more talkative version caught up with us momentarily, tagged with two of the smaller ones. One that brought me the boots. The other one now had a helmet on her head, an ancient Asian looking one that didn't fit, she probably took it as a trophy from her unfortunate victim.

"I…" Was the only thing I managed to say before I had to admit I was sorely lacking in terms of dealing with a fireball throwing and slightly psychotic anthropomorphic foxes. I didn't think I could run. I didn't even know where to, and as unnerving the monsters were, they weren't hostile.

Another explosion came from the forest - they weren't hostile to me, at least, as they found other targets to vent their fiery aggression on.

"Hm?" The fiery fox regarded me once again, entirely unperturbed by the fact her kin was rampaging somewhere else, and then pointed out the obvious, "You need clothes and boots, Master."

For a while, I didn't respond and had to force myself to carry out the dialogue, to bring my mind away from the flashbacks to the violence.

"And you don't need clothes?" I asked. It was, a stupid question, however, she was probably willing to accommodate it.

"There are no humans around," she replied, and added playfully, "and I don't mind you looking at me."
"I am human."
All furry monsters, larger and smaller alike, laughed as though it was the most hilarious joke they ever heard.

"That's lame. You are Master." Bigger one said, while her lesser kin seconded with screechy "Master! Master!"

In an attempt to normalize this conversation in this absurd situation, and in a desperate attempt to grasp any resemblance of normality in the situation where common sense failed, I decided to direct it elsewhere.

"What's your name anyway?" I asked, albeit without any real desire to find the answer.

"I don't have a name yet. You can give me one," she replied, in utmost seriousness.

"What about Tama?" I suggested mindlessly. I had no reasons for picking it, no justification, no real thought of why, I just said it. It has soon proven to be a mistake, as it triggered those game-like windows to invade my perception.

The first unit was named! Tama, the Purifier Alpha.
Skill "Scorched Earth lvl.7" gained.
The system announced, and immediately a ruby fog erupting from the ground spat two of the smaller variants of the vulpine monsters, very similar to a few of those already in my presence. They seemed all quite happy with their magically increasing numbers.

"I like it, Master." Newly named Tama praised me.

One of the mini-version jumped at me, which of course made my heart rate spike in the moment of fright. Even if fluffy, those things were ruthless killers, but she obviously just wanted to hug me. I tried to free myself from the embrace, which earned me a "Master." reply in a more disappointed tone.

Their trail of thoughts was beyond me, but I didn't try to challenge those as I wouldn't have a chance alone, in some forest in the middle of nowhere.

I turned my attention to my feet, there were small cuts and bruises that burnt and ached, which would force me to accept the offered boots after all. I, however, hesitated, too aware of the possible risk of infection. I wanted to clear the wound in some way. But there wasn't any water, let alone anything better to do that at the moment.

"You should make someone heal you, Master," Tama supplied, helpfully. She crouched and inspected me closely, and it felt as though she was concerned.

I wasn't sure what she meant - if it was forcing others, or just having the power that simply fixed everything. In the context where summoning monsters as possible, healing magic wasn't that much of a stretch.

"Heal?" I tried. Of course, it didn't do anything.

There was another bang that shook the forest, suggesting that more creatures than those immediately next to me were causing trouble somewhere.

"There must be a way to…" Tama said, and she looked slightly up, almost as if she was gazing on the horizon. Two of the smaller kins bolted away almost like they carried out the order.

"Status?"

No reaction.

"Character Screen."

Nothing.

"Overview."

This, to my surprise, actually worked. Another, much larger floating window, appeared in front of my eyes in this twisted parody of augmented reality overlay.
The Master
<The Root of all Evil, level 2>
Skills<Scorched Earth lvl.7>
<Second skill not selected>
Units (Active)Tama, The Purifier Alpha
13 * Purifiers
Units (In queue)1 * Purifier respawn in 0:52:21
I sighed. Aside from the realization that there may be up to a dozen of the giggly monstrosities, it didn't provide any useful information and the absence of any usual game terminology about hit points or statuses served as a dire reminder that my health state wasn't subject to any game logic as far I was aware. The small infection could lead quite easily to death…

I shuddered at the thought.

Only monsters were what that system threw at me, and in the meantime, the menagerie gathered around, now they must be really all twelve of them, in addition to the freshly named Tama.

They dragged in the various items wrapped in what I assumed was once a cloak, presenting the loot collection to me with the joyous "For Master!"

Others brought the dead rabbits they probably hunted using fireballs. And while monsters - 'Purifiers' how the mysterious window called them - were fine with consuming the raw, and slightly burned meat, I was disgusted enough to possibly throw up.

In the meantime, Tama combed through the prize of loot and retrieved an archaic-looking bottle gourd canteen left among the various items they gathered, ranging from knit knacks to even the mostly undamaged armour.

As she proceeded to clear my dirtied and cut feet with the canteen from the archaic bottle while using straps torn from the looted fabric as improvised bandages, smaller fox-kins fiddled with the found armour to probably play a dress-up with me.

"Why are you so interested in helping me?" I couldn't help myself but ask.

"You created us. You are the beginning and the end," she replied, in all due seriousness. It sounded a bit creepy. "We are the part of you and will be recreated through you."

"Do you remember the moments before the man stabbed and killed you?"

"Yes. Why?" She said, and the realization hit me - the respawn mechanic.

"Should you die, would you be recreated again?" I deduced. It explained why one shielded me from arrows with her own body.

"Most likely." She answered with the close equivalent of a smile. Despite the animalistic vulpine features, she did have a wide variety of expressions seen in humans.

Then, abruptly, the minor 'Purifiers' stopped what they were doing and straightened, just as Tama did.
There was a moment of silence, I could see their ears twitching, and while they remained eerily silent, and with the properly animalistic grin, quite insidious, and unsettling.

I wanted to speak, but one of the smaller ones clung to me and pointed somewhere towards the other part of the forest with her clawed hand. They sensed something, relatively close, something I wasn't able to pick up but their seemingly heightened perception would.

Then I heard that too. Voices. Muffled by the woods, barely noticeable, but undeniably there, coming closer, the clingiest one of the 'Purifiers' did hold me, even not through restaining fashion and kept tracing the sound of cracking branches and increasingly loud voices.

I stayed silent - let it be fear, shock or just confusion - I didn't know.

Monsters spread around, with few remaining close. Tama rose, gathering sparkles and smoke forming around her claws. She waited.

A few minutes later, a group of humans, armed with a varying collection of melee weapons, but in dirty attires that screamed the fantasy bandit, fumbled from the woods to the decaying road we were still sitting in. They seemed half-drunk, argued about something in a language I can't quite place, words forming just the random gibberish. Then they noticed us.

Let it be through senses dulled by alcohol, or serious incompetence, they didn't expect us there despite how they must have heard all the noise earlier

As their attention turned toward us, one bandit decided to flee while others scrambled for the fight they didn't see coming.

Tama giggled, and the trail of fire sparkled around her fingers as she sentenced them to die.
 
Chapter 3: Crush and Burn
It was even more of a massacre than the previous fight.



A fireball detonating in the middle of the group immediately put the already confused bandits into disarray as both their clothes and their bodies caught ablaze. Two spared from the initial blast attempted to flee while their comrades threw themselves to the ground, trying to put out fires. Neither helped.



Both attempts were equally futile when facing pyrokinetic monsters capable of leaping over distances. Smaller monsters charging in the wake of the explosion made short work of any opposition.



The air was filled with the stench of burned flesh, pained screams and giggling of sadistic monsters. I was once more entirely paralyzed and just sat there, my response was more dulled by the shock than before. I just couldn't do anything, couldn't make myself do anything.



The monsters once again laughed at the destruction they caused and I silently mourned this tragic course of the event that I didn't dare to even prevent for the reason I couldn't admit to myself. I didn't wish those men to die, but I didn't do anything - then another of those overlay windows decided to taunt me about it.



Skill not selected before the encounter.
For attempting extermination of humans in the area. Skill "Slayer of Men" Lvl. 1" gained instead.


I wanted to scream out that nothing of such was my intent, but once again, just as many times before, a bloody mist spit out another monster others welcome with their giggly voices.



It was a slightly different one from the previous ones. Yet, it was still discernibly feminine, despite her black fur, and posture hunched almost as if she was ready to dash out, which gave off the vibe of a werewolf.



"They missed one." She snickered, her voice, while woman-like has a soft snarling undertone to it.



"Let him go." I pleaded, there was enough death already. I wasn't in the state when I could issue anything resembling orders in a firm tone of voice, but it didn't seem that the new one needed one.



"Yes, Master." She replied without hesitation.



The new one fit right in, the smaller 'Purifiers' chuckled but let her alone, and Tama opted to ignore the 'werewolf' completely stepping away to retrieve something from the bodies farther away. Her lesser kin probably clawed those down rather than burning them by default. I didn't know.



A new anthropomorphic canine circled about me, sniffing the air.



Unlike others, she was larger, with more defined musculature under the unnaturally gleaming dark fur, with a hulky posture leaning forward which somehow looked quite elegant as she crept around on her digitigrade legs, weaving her long bushy tail around. Compared to Tama, her snout was longer, her ears shorter, her mane was richer with a more blood-like colour, and even the feminine curves were much more pronounced - essentially, a meaner, bigger, badder, fire motif replaced by the shadowy hue for her.



When Tama returned with the other bottle the original owner won't need anymore, the new monster was already hanging over me from behind, softly purring in my ear: "I will protect you better, Master."



She somehow disturbed me even more than the other ones, as her claws were also noticeably larger and scythe-like, excellent for tearing the soft targets. Unlike the smaller, but equally spontaneously clingy vulpine equivalents, she was stronger and impossible to shake down - but she radiated a pleasant warmth which was paradoxically calming as it was unnerving.



Meanwhile, Tama returned with a bottle that didn't break while the hapless bandits were being brutally dispatched, and presented it to me, paying no special attention to the black werewolf-like counterpart hanging over me.



"I think it's sake, or similar spirits. Smells like alcohol." She announced, "May work as disinfection."



I didn't say anything. Did the men have to die because of this? Why was it happening to me, how did I deserve it?



My thoughts were interrupted by the alcohol being poured on the bruised and cut feet. It, of course, created a sharp burning pain, but ultimately, it was meaningless. Just a minor cut to be treated. As an alternative to slapping my face. My mind escaped towards the suffering caused to others anyway.



By the time I was able to force myself to react to anything my monstrous companion managed to strap me into the looted armour, bandaged my feet in the straps of torn cloth, and put me literally into the boots they found.



They might have said anything, they did speak, but I paid no attention to it. I was leaving this scene of horror.



A few hundred metres down the road, a panoramic view of the land opened to us.



In front of us was the lush green valley, with a river snaking through the patches of dense forest divided by the traces of human habitation, ranging from fields and small hamlets to the larger town far in the distance, almost obscured by the fog. It had a very old, oriental feel to it, evoking pictures of ancient Asia. Or how I imagined it. This, along with no sign of modern life, emphasised I was far from home.



As I was hit with the overall sense of hopelessness and the lack of direction. I was lost in some foreign land. No backup plan, no main plan for what mattered. Zero ideas about how I got there, even less how to leave.



After a short internal struggle to arrange my thoughts I finally forced myself to ask something not taking my eyes off the horizon.



"Where are we?" I asked almost absentmindedly.



"I don't know, Master."



"Any idea how to get home?"



"My home is where you are, Master."



The reply reminded me once again of how both strange and dangerous my current company was. Tama was a dangerous creature that killed without remorse, and her lesser variants currently loitering around were no better. I doubted that the tall female werewolf that was placed in my company had any greater restraint in that regard. As much as they claimed they would follow my order, I had my doubts, however, in the strange land with possibly still hostile locals, I somehow doubted I would fare better without.



I was already anxious about that. And looking at how two so-called 'Purifiers' tore apart a slightly burned rabbit so they could share the meal made me sick once more.



"Any idea what to do now?" I asked.



"Water? Food? Shelter?" The werewolf provided surprisingly useful advice.



"We can hunt quite well," Tama argued.



"While I will gladly keep Master warm, a shelter wouldn't harm." The black canine argued.



"I don't mind either," Tama replied, once again starting to be flirty. I rather shivered at the thought of how murderous she can get.



Luckily, they didn't start bickering, and I considered my options.



There weren't many.



The closest structure was a multi-tiered pagoda, or at least something very similar to it, rising above the treeline, easily visible from where we stood. It was still probably several kilometres away, but closer than anything else. I looked around, trying to get my bearing on our relative location. Recalling the cliff now somewhere far behind us, I assumed we were coming down the hills.



I decided to head there and stepped forward - perhaps there will be someone able to help, to bring some light into the situation, perhaps…



"Do you have a name?" I asked the canine monster which decided to keep uncomfortably close as I tried to walk. Tama also kept close.



"No, Master, you only named Tama." She answered eagerly - still a slight growl undertone to her voice.



"What about … Miwah." I suggested. The Asian name for the vaguely Asian scenery we were passing through. I came to regret it immediately.



The second unit is named! Miwah, the Eviscerator Alpha
Skill "Slayer of Men" Lvl. 2 " gained.


I yanked as yet another window once again appeared in front of my eyes, and the geysers of reddish mist spawned yet another pair of monsters into the world. That startled me, even if it wasn't the first time it happened. Those looked like a smaller, younger version of newly named Miwah, comparatively more diminutive in stature, with less pronounced feminine traits, not that wild mane, and still long fluffy tails. They were not lacking in those sharp scythe-like talons though.

"Master?" They announced themselves, once again, with girly voices, just more pronounced "r" in their speech.

With the absence of any reaction on my part, the smaller 'Purifiers' giggled in welcome, but otherwise, the two kinds of monsters didn't seem to be bothered by each other too much. They did try to get my attention; instead, I kept my mouth shut.

"Very nice, Master." Miwah purred approvingly.

Everything that happened just led to increasing their numbers, even the relatively innocent actions, like names, and I realised the obvious - I didn't have a single idea how to even speak with locals if they didn't understand my language, and the increasing crowd around me didn't exactly invite trust. But I was probably more worried about being lost in the foreign land

"Can I ask you to not attack humans at first sight?" I tried.

Everyone looked at me at the same time, with more than a dozen pairs of eyes, almost like I said something quite ridiculous. A tense moment of silence was interrupted by the fog forming a fox-like 'Purifier' which immediately chortled just as others tend to do.

"If they don't attack us first?" I tried, quickly adding: "I need to ask them something. We don't even know where we are."

"Yes, Master." Both Tama and Miwah confirmed, and their lesser kins echoed it with a "Master!" chant, returning to normal behaviour. Normal for them, I assumed.

I was about to ask them to stop calling me the "Master", I wasn't that comfortable with it and their general attitude, but I sensed it was a conversation for another time and let it be even if it felt weird. It didn't seem to be a good idea to challenge their worldview at the moment.

"Let's go."

"Let's …"

For the following half an hour, or perhaps even more, I entirely failed in holding any kind of conversation as my thoughts were preoccupied with the implications of my current situation, and the constant struggle to not think about the people being scorched alive. Fact that the perpetrators of those acts dawdled around didn't help.

The monsters didn't seem to mind though. The two larger ones stuck dangerously close to me, their little kin were like an unruly mob whose members would occasionally run away toward every possible direction, further on the road, or into the forest that surrounded us trying to amuse themselves. Or catch wildlife to snack on, which I rather didn't want to look at.

I tried to occupy my mind by thinking about some way to communicate with the locals if no one spoke the same language, assuming they were even willing to speak with me in the first place which may not be guaranteed, which led to a creeping realisation that I simply didn't know what to do. Random stranger kindness became unlikely and without the means to communicate the complex concepts 'getting home' was almost impossible. I was about to ask Tama or Miwah whether they could speak other languages.

Then the breath of wind carried in the stench of death, blood and faeces. Monsters were probably keenly aware of this before I was, but I was trying to pay no attention to them.

Before us, down the road, was a scene of another massacre, this one however not committed by the furry menagerie surrounding me. A few broken or overturned wagons blocked the road, remnants of what once was the cargo scattered around, along with the score of corpses. Bodies that had died from sword slashes or that were pierced by arrows were left there in the pools of their own blood, to rot or be eaten by scavengers.

The stench was unbearable. I struggled to push forward, while 'my' creatures sprung into action, either to loot whatever remained there, help themselves to little knick-knacks to keep as trophies or face whatever ambush may lay ahead.

Tama and Miwah stayed close, leaving their lesser kin to do the job.

I, however, couldn't bring myself to care and push ahead mindlessly, and I didn't care for ambushes or motives, I only didn't want to look at the carnage.

Ahead, beyond the curving road that sneaked downhill, a pagoda-like structure still loomed over the surrounding trees, much closer to us than before.

All the dead bodies around were a stern reminder that it wasn't as safe a place as I thought it to be.
 
Chapter 4: Rip and Tear
I pushed forward.



I wanted nothing more than to leave the scene of carnage far behind, escape the gut-wrenching stench still hanging in the air.



"Burn the bodies," I ordered. It was the first time I gave a direct command to the monsters and was surprised it was carried out at all. No matter how strange and cruel they were, monsters had their own minds.



"Yes, Master," Tama replied in her pleasant, feminine voice.



I happily left them behind to carry out the deed and leave them behind.



I continued down the road, determined to put distance between myself and the scene. I didn't know if I was inadvertently destroying the evidence of some crime - a mass murder, caravan ambush, whatever it was that transpired here - I just wanted it gone. Even if I didn't know if it was doable, if fire blasts from magical 'Purifiers' were enough to cremate a human body, they seemed enthusiastic about setting something on fire, whether it was living or dead. Blasts echoed around, and the air filled with a new smell - one of burning flesh.



One curve of the road ahead, I found myself staring at the gateway that undoubtedly led to that pagoda-like structure we have seen towering above the trees.



There wasn't any wall per see, only an entrance - a gate and the cobbled stairway rising up behind it, leading somewhere behind the barrier of greenery where the tower stood. With a hip-and-gable roof hanging on the pillars of carved stone, and while undoubtedly Eastern Asian in its style, even though I couldn't quite place it as it seems to be rather an amalgamation of several styles fused together rather than a direct counterpart of anything on Earth. Chinese or Korean people would point out the differences between their cultures with relative ease, but I was hardly knowledgeable on the matter.



Most important right now was, however, the gate was guarded. Two startled guards looked around, evidently unsettled by the noise, and fumes left by the burning I, perhaps unwisely, ordered.



They didn't look quite like the soldiers I encountered before, and not quite the bandits either, as they did have armour, though it was mostly an uncomplicated, ragged chest piece made of leather worn over the dull grey cotton clothes, completed with the typically Asian straw hats.



Sounds, muffled by the trees, came from the direction of the pagoda, suggesting a bigger crowd out there. Perhaps some form of the gathering was held at the base of the tower, or perhaps there was a camp or even a small hamlet I couldn't see from the direction I approached. I had a feeling there was something important there, but I couldn't quite explain it.



Whatever was the case, it could be my chance to speak with natives before it comes down to even more violence and death.



I looked around. I was alone. Monsters were nowhere to be seen, probably too consumed by their pyromania and had taken the opportunity to torch something down with gusto. So-called 'Purifiers' enjoyed using their fire-based powers. Even Miwah and her two lesser kin were nowhere to be seen.



The only thing that remained was a shifting, glittering haze. It was like a trick of light usually played on one's eyes in steaming hot climates like the desert, blurring the object farther away from the observer. Except it was much closer, and the surrounding temperature didn't match such a phenomenon. I banished the thoughts, as I had a more pressing matter to attempt.



The time to attempt diplomacy was there.



"Hello!" I tried as I came to their view.



Guards adopted a defensive stance and readied their spears. They were already tense and my sudden appearance didn't make it any better.



In an attempt to defuse the situation, I raised my hands in what I thought was a non-threatening gesture, to show I had no weapon, though I didn't have any good idea what I should do in such a situation.



"I come in peace!" was the first thing I came up with, and I regretted it immediately, as it would probably sound more cheesy than actually diplomatic, and that was assuming they did understand what I was saying.



"Do you speak… English, perhaps?" I asked, still shouting, so they can hear me, "I just want to talk?"



They had to hear me, but no response came. None at all, not even in their native tongue I didn't understand anyway, let alone in the one I did. They only stared for several long seconds.



Then the guards, both with their spears levelled and pointed at me, started approaching cautiously.



I tried to step back. That weird haze of shifting air moved in front of me, and around both spearmen. As suspicious as it was to me, they didn't seem to notice and kept their gaze locked on me.



"I don't want a fight. I just want to talk…" was the last thing I managed to let out in the final desperate attempt to diffuse the situation, but to no avail.



Both humans charged at me with their spears, yelling a warcry I didn't understand. I stumbled and fell back in surprise.



They didn't run their pikes through me. Instead, they pierced through one of the mini-werewolves that appeared out of nowhere, or rather what was once that out-of-place mirage that stalked around.



The creature convulsed in pain, blood spattering the ground, but still, she chuckled as it died.



As two humans tried to yank their weapons free from the dying creature, it was futile, as Miwah materialized behind them, emerging out from the ever-shifting mirage that hid the werewolf from sight. And with a single slash, she tore one of the men's throats, nearly decapitating him in the process.



The second human screamed in terror. Before he could do anything, a huge werewolf grabbed him by the throat, nearly lifting him off the ground.



"My Master wants to speak with you. Cooperate and you will live." Werewolf growled.



The human struggled, helplessly gurgling for air.



I would never find out if he understood the words.



The man tried to grab the dirk at his belt in a futile attempt to resist, but Miwah snapped his neck with terrifying ease, then ripped it just for good measure with her scythe-like claws.



She cast the gored body away like a broken doll.



"We will find you a better human to play with, Master," Miwah said decisively, just as her fallen little wolf-kin disintegrated into the bloody mist only to be spawned anew, alive and whole, as a cruel reminder of how little life was worth here.



It horrified me. Looking at the scene of yet another murder, I wanted to scream, to yell at the monster about the value of human life. I wanted to yell at her about how she couldn't just murder people. I wanted all that, but what I did say was:



"Thank you for saving my life."



My own response shocked me perhaps more than another gruesome death - however, I was forced to admit to myself that I would be dead without their protection. Without any fighting skills of my own, they were the only thing that stood between me and danger, and even the most hapless bandit lurking in those woods could be an end for me.



Whether the two spearmen that had to die were bandits themselves, it was hard to say. The ravaged caravan, or whatever it was, wasn't that far away from here.



"I'll protect you, Master," Miwah said. The feminine voice behind the furry body sounded quite determined.



There wasn't much time left to consider how I felt about this situation.



Down the stairs, another guy came, saw us and tried hollering in alarm. He didn't last long either.



Another of Miwah wolf-kins pounced on him from the shadows, clawing him down mercilessly, only to be killed herself by the swarming reinforcement that came to answer the call for help.



By going here, to the place under the towering pagoda, I disturbed something akin to the military or a bandit encampment, rather than the place of worship or some fancy residence. Far too many armed people poured into the road.



More than a dozen humans mobbing up on the smaller wolf-kin was enough to take her down, yet it didn't mean anything.



As a confused host of soldiers spread to surround me and Miwah, wary of the wolf-like monstrosity, there was another of those lesser canines that managed to slash the throat of the soldier that strayed away from the group before disappearing again into its chameleon cloak.



The death of the man only fuelled the system that was thirsting for more killing.



Skill "Slayer of Men" Lvl. 3" gained.


A bloody cloud erupting from the ground spat out a replacement for the downed canine, along with another two of their lookalikes, and the cycle of violence began to span anew as humans were too surprised to expect enemies to appear out of nowhere.



Not knowing what I was doing and without any plan of my own, I got back on my feet and stumbled forward, to the gate, and stairs rising behind it drawn in by something I couldn't quite explain. As something drew me there. Even if it meant walking toward enemies.



Miwah too joined the fray to keep them out of me, as more armed people crowded the area drawn in by the cries for help - they didn't expect werewolves able to go invisible, and everything turned into a bloodbath.



Skill "Slayer of Men" Lvl. 4" gained.


The red mist spat another batch. I made it through the gate and ended up somewhere on the cobblestone path in the middle of greenery that rose towards the tower.



A sudden wave of heat swept the area somewhere behind me as the fire-throwing monsters caught up with the rest, hitting the crowd with their flaming bursts of magic.



Skill "Slayer of Men" Lvl. 5" gained.
]Skill "Scorched Earth Lvl.8" gained.


The system, or whatever stood behind this spawning power and its game-like floating windows invading my vision, was evidently pleased by the killing, throwing yet more monsters into the fray.



A handful of scared horses trying to escape all that noise and flames stomped the few soldiers and monsters alike. It was total chaos and I stood in the middle of it.



This was however interrupted when a hulking giant of the man took to the battlefield.



Compared to both the monsters and spindly human fighters, he was a muscular brute towering over others, dressed in nothing more than the baggy pantaloons. He wielded the oversized wooden club covered with spiked metal bands, and he did so with deadly precision.



He was more than a match for monsters that tried the same ambush trick on him. Where lesser men fell with the torn throats, he prevailed, shaking away or crushing the ambushers.



Monsters focused on him, especially the canine-like ones, but he brutally dispatched them. Even if not completely invulnerable, he was a formidable foe that clearly exceeded human limits - previously deadly claws of the werewolf-like monsters didn't penetrate his skin deeply enough, failing to inflict serious damage. It seems his wounds were closing on their own.



Several lesser canine monsters lay dead on the cobbled flood, their bodies broken and blood splattered around, and goliath didn't look even winded from the fight.



A ruby mist started to reclaim the bodies, soon the cycle would begin anew, with another wave of monsters.



However, the hulking fighter wasn't going to wait for anything. He closed on me, and the shadow of Miwah leapt over me and on the giant, roaring the challenge forcing him to defend himself against the attack.



When forced to let loose of this massive weapon when there was no room to swing it properly, he didn't fall even under the frenzied flurry of blows. It came down to a short, brutal brawl and even as sharp claws tore the deep, bloody cuts at this skin, he kept going. In the end, he shook the werewolf down throwing her down on the cold stone ground. Heavily battered from the entire exchange, Miwah still charged him with all her remaining strength, only to be slammed to the ground once more by the raging brute.



With her second charge at him, she was slower, giving him space to recover his weapon, even smashing down her lesser kin attempting to use the opening. He swung his club at her like one would swing a baseball bat with such force it easily smashed the werewolf's head in mid-flight. Blood sprayed the forest path's floor.



A ruby fog claimed the corpse.



With the challenger gone, he focused his attention on me. While his injuries were healing with clearly supernatural speed, closing right before my eyes, the brute still looked exhausted, pausing briefly almost like he tried to force his body to fix itself before raising his club against me.



However, before he could strike me down, a bolt of fire exploded right into his face. He staggered backwards, roaring in pain. His skin, so resistant to cuts and slashes, blistered with heavy burns. For a moment, he let his weapon go, instinctively trying to cover his face but gathered himself with the shocking speed, ready to continue the brawl.



"Master!" I heard the scratching voices of the monsters, but they were too late to intervene.



Muscled hulk was faster, despite the pain, or perhaps even because of it.



Enraged, he swiped his arm and threw me aside with ease. Pain exploded in my chest under the punch and I blanked out for a short moment. I came back to my senses lying on the dirt off the stone path. My ears rang and I felt like I was about to vomit. I struggled to catch my breath, almost like there was a brick weighing my chest down.



With my entire body still convulsing in agony, and blurry vision slowly regaining its sharpness once more, I rolled around only to see the goliath fall as all the remaining monsters descended on him with the fiery rage.



"For Master! Master! Master!"



The hulking fighter raged and I saw him breaking one of the smaller monsters with his bare arm, but it was too late for him. With me no longer standing in the way, fox-like monsters surrounded him and released their pyrokinetic powers, drowning the small area with the scorching heat.



The man screamed as he burned.



Skill "Slayer of Men" Lvl. 6" gained.
Skill "Scorched Earth Lvl.9" gained.
Major Enemy killed. One more to advance the General level.


The window announced, but I paid no attention to it. I wasn't able to pay attention to anything anymore.



Unable to stand up, I collapsed on my back once more, and everything went black.
 
Here's hoping for automatic select of healer type mob, or some regenerative effect of power.

Witch doctor, alchemist, tribal poisoning Master?
Edit : forth type would be builder/translator mob, fifth one the one not chosen previously
 
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Chapter 5: Economy of Answers
There was a certain respite in that short moment between consciousness and unconsciousness.

The world was just a confusing mix of blurred images and muffled sounds as my mind drifted back to the waking world. It could have been minutes, but it may just as well have been seconds stretched into infinity by senses dulled by trauma. I didn't know. I couldn't know. But for that fleeting instant, I thought everything was just a nightmare, one I was awakening from.

Then images took shape, and voices became clear and more audible.

I was greeted by Tama's vulpine face, then a few more of her smaller kin.

"Master?" She asked, sounding seriously concerned. "Can you hear me, Master?"

"Master! Master!" An echo of screechy girlish voices added, like a chant, and a few of Tama's smaller kin leaned over me as well to check on me closer.

I groaned at the painful reminder of what that really meant. The ground was cold, my muscles ached and an unpleasant chill seeped into my bones, forcing me to get up on my feet. I gasped for breath as my body protested with spikes of sharp pain, in response to almost every move. That constricting armour they previously put me into didn't help. Though having it may have helped in survival, it pulled, locked and straightened me into a less comfortable position.

"You shouldn't move." She objected, "You could…"

I struggled to stand.

"It's not like you can call me an ambulance," I said, wheezing and coughing slightly - I didn't feel well, but at least there was no blood. Not mine, at the very least - the stench hovering in the air was almost unbearable. But I would hardly be sicker from the smell alone than I already was from being knocked out cold.

I still forced myself up in the end. With Tama's help, at least, I had to lean on her for support, especially when sudden vertigo assaulted me, forcing me to stagger. The vulpine monster was there to catch me, along with three of their smaller kin, immediately rushing and quite eager to help.

"How long…I was out?"

"Minute. Perhaps two," she replied, and it felt like she was seriously upset, "There needs to be a few of us near you all the time from now on, we can't let humans near you."

"I am human." I protested. Mildly. When staying upright turned into a serious struggle, one can hardly find strength for argument.

"It is not time for jokes, Master. We were very worried." She told me with a clear scowl, despite her animalistic features. Her insistence did convince me to touch my face. It didn't feel any different, but it did sting on touch almost as if bruised. I didn't have any mirror to check. There were different things to worry about.

I didn't say anything and continued walking, or rather tried to. I was reeling with the support of my monstrous companions, back on the cobbled path that raised up to the pagoda-like structure.

There was something up there, I felt it, nonetheless, I couldn't explain the source of that sensation at all.

There were bodies scattered around the pathway rising towards the tower uphill, mostly humans, but those of my furry creatures too. I could identify what was left of Miwah after a club of that brute crushed her skull.

Even if remnants of the monsters seemed locked in what seemed like a bad state of decomposition, my presence seemed to have triggered the process of them being claimed by the red mist. Just as many times before, it quickly dissolved them to nothingness. And soon after, they were birthed anew from a burst of ruby smoke, alive and whole.

There were fewer of them than anticipated. I suspected it was a matter of time before the bloody mists would create more of them to continue the cycle of violence again and again.

We were down to fewer of them than before, only a handful of fiery vulpines, or 'Purifiers' as the game-like window referred to them, and only two shadowy canines - the "Evicerator' types.

More might come back later - there were conditions that I didn't quite understand, and was not in the mood to investigate.

It was a painful reminder that men, however, would not get back up. A loss of life in yet another bloodshed made me gloomy, but frighteningly enough it didn't feel as horrifying as it was before.

Another concentration of the same bloody mist, and another monster spawned. Miwah was back from the dead too, a big werewolf gleamed in her shadowy hue as she rushed to me.

"Master!" She growled, even so in quite an affectionate way. I didn't like to be sandwiched between her, and Tama, but I felt like my legs could give up anytime and couldn't complain.

I wanted to go up, to see what was inside the tower - that feeling there was something important that made me walk towards enemies earlier, and caused me to be hurt in the process.

To see what was up there. What led me there, called me there, what wasn't just a convenient orientation point in the sea of greenery and gave meaning to the fight.

Before she said anything, a panicked scream sounded from somewhere above. Then another.

I rushed up. Or wanted to, as persistent vertigo hadn't passed just yet.

We made it past another greatly symbolic gateway similar to the one down by the road and through it, to the courtyard in front of the pagoda. There were also smaller buildings surrounding it too, same vaguely Asian design to it, with hip-and-gable roofs though much simpler in style, without much decoration.

They, along with the main tower itself seemed damaged or in disrepair, suggesting that recent inhabitants were squatters in someone's else home, rather than its usual inhabitants.

It seemed someone made a camp here, with improvised tents and campfires, now in complete disarray. Supplies and belongings were scattered around, some burnt, some broken. And a few bodies of soldiers that were unfortunate to escape. A handful of my runaway monsters lurked there, searching.

A man tried to get out from the hiding spot under what was once an improvised shelter, trying to flee, but one of the smaller 'Purifiers' was roaming around. Instead of using her fire blasts, she caught up to him with a long leap and struck him down with a sword she had retrieved.

"For Master! For Master! For Master!" She chanted, usual sadistic glee replaced with blind rage, as she literally chopped her poor victim to pieces. Then the smaller vulpine looked up and noticed me.

"Master!" Her eyes shone in recognition, almost as if something clicked back in the deranged little mind. She dropped the sword and rushed towards me. Others obviously didn't think she was dangerous - to me at the very least.

"Master. Master! Master!" Little psycho hugged me quite affectionately and refused to let me go. She smelled of death, her fur was soaked with blood. I felt repulsed, but others took this as a signal for the group hug.

Their mental processes were truly beyond me.

I wasn't wondering about them for too long as the pain let itself be known.

"Ouch." I breathed out, "This hurts."

It gave me some space. The bloodiest and craziest of them did refuse to let me go even after that. I inadvertently petted her which only encouraged her to stick next to me.

"We should find you the safe spot to rest…" Miwah offered immediately, "Some humans may be still around."

"...and check your injuries." Tama finished the sentence.

And I, deep inside, agreed with that. I was anxious at the very least about how bad it was, not to mention I wanted some quiet time after all of that madness, but there was that feeling…

…that nagging feeling that led me to this cursed place.

I had to see. Using the clingy one as support, I headed towards the pagoda.

While the Asian-styled tower was mostly made of wood, its base was of solid stone masonry elevated above the courtyard with very short stairs rising towards the entrance. I stopped after taking two steps.

The large wooden door was open wide, letting just enough light inside to see what looked like a heavily decorated shrine at least judging from what seemed to be a broken altar, though carved ornaments seem to be damaged, with more goods scattered on the floor. The place looked purposefully vandalized or looted.

Two 'Evicerators' rushed past me, into the tower then stopped to look around, sniffing the air, looking for threats.

I didn't have their senses, and I couldn't understand how they could smell anything other than the blood or scorched flesh, though even I could feel that this something that drew me there wasn't in the temple, or whatever this tower originally was.

I made it back down and almost tripped as vertigo struck again, and I didn't roll down only thanks to my furry helpers.

The source of this strange sensation was one of those other houses. If this place was originally a temple, I assumed those houses were where the priest was supposed to live, though I had no idea how the local religious practice worked in actuality. Lots of armed people we had to go through suggested otherwise.

But my monsters also realized there was something too, rushing towards one of the smaller buildings. I wanted to head there too, but they were faster breaking into the house. Shadowy canids didn't forget to cloak themselves before entering and then…

Then there was a panicked scream and then, silence once more.

"I believe it is safe," Miwah announced without actually looking. Perhaps she felt what her smaller kin was doing. She did enter the run-down abode first while I paused, in expectation of what the nebulous sensation may mean.

When I got in I was welcomed by the gruesome sight of yet another dead body of a man with his throat torn apart, blood splattered all around, and four still living women cowering in the corner of the bamboo cage that dominated the room. Though dirty, unpleasant and smelly, it felt mostly like an old dwelling turned improvised prison.

Only one prisoner stood up and froze upon looking at me, while the other whimpered at the sight of monsters.

I realized that she was the source of that indefinable sensation that almost pulled me there for reasons unknown. Puzzled, I couldn't make myself speak and briefly, just stared in silence.

While she certainly was a very attractive young woman of Asian descent with silky black hair, mystical green eyes and smooth features, she wasn't someone who would make me speechless. Even if she was miles ahead of those dirty and terrified girls still snivelling in the corner. She did look slightly rugged, almost like she had a few bad days, and her worn-out though certainly once expensive robe suggested she wasn't quite the commoner.

It wasn't her look that stunned me though. She just felt - wrong, to say least, and it unsettled not only me but the monsters around. I could feel how tensed they were and seemed to react to the woman the same way I did, while significantly more angered. Growling 'Evicerators' seeped shadowy hue and 'Purifiers' gathered the flames. I gripped Tama's hand just before she managed to throw the fireball at the woman.

The woman stepped back, wary of us, but still stood up with obvious defiant intent. I didn't care - I merely wanted answers I felt she should have. Must have, I told myself, even if I couldn't explain why she specifically all of our people.

"Hello? Who are you?" I said, awkwardly attempting conversation. Perhaps all the strange sensations that drew me here meant I was supposed to talk to her, yet I didn't know what to say exactly.

"What's going on there?"

No reply.

"How did I get there? How do I get back?"

Still no reply.

"Answer me!"

I raised my voice, angry more at that unsettling strange sensation than at the woman I had never seen before.

It did spark a reaction though. She made a slightly disgusted face almost like she couldn't bear to hear my voice, though she did say something. First, she hesitated, then repeated the line seemingly trying a more authoritative tone.

"Do you speak … English?" I asked though I was far from being calm. Couldn't put my finger on it, but she irked me, somehow.

More than that, she agitated the monsters too.

She said something again. I couldn't understand the language, it was foreign, somewhat high pitched and surprisingly quite annoying to listen to, though I somehow doubted it was actual Chinese or similar. If it was, I wouldn't understand it anyway.

"I don't understand!"

When she again tried to speak something that sounded like a command, Miwah totally lost her cool.

Shadowy werewolf tore off the door of the wooden cage and grabbed the now shocked woman by the neck, raising her other hand ready to tear the offender apart. Other women wailed in terror, even the bossy lady realized her mistake.

"Don't kill her," I commanded, not wanting any more bloodshed.

"Yes, Master," Miwah confirmed.

I was almost unnaturally angry about the whole thing, emotions boiled within me for reasons I couldn't quite put into words, and I felt too done with this situation. I was so fed up with the women I felt I couldn't bear to have them anywhere close, though not enough to wish their death, and I almost felt the tingling sensation creeping over my brain.

"Drop her and the others somewhere on that road, I don't want to see them ever again. Don't harm them."

For the first time, I felt nothing when smaller monsters poured in and dragged the kicking, screaming women away.

I stumbled outside and sat on the stairs of the looted shrine, or whatever this place was. Only Tama remained close, those bunch of her smaller kin were within the earshot.

"What are we going to do now, Master?" The fox-woman asked.

I had no answer. Worse even, I did realize that I had an answer close, but let slip between my fingers when I ordered those women dragged away and thrown out. The feeling, strange, itching sensation that forced me to go there, was gone, with that strange lady out of my sight.

Miwah was back soon enough, along with the rest of the creatures.

"What did you do with the woman?" I asked.

"They run, as you order, Master." The werewolf answered.

Briefly, I considered asking them to hunt down back again, but I felt too tired and my aching body reminded me of itself once more. Besides, what if I was compelled to release them again, I would waste all the effort once more.

I felt exhausted. Answers had to wait.
 
Chapter 6: Of Names and Numbers
I groaned as they freed me from the constriction of that stupid armour.

It was most likely possible to get loose of those laces and buckles that hold the thing together without their assistance but when every movement hurt and stung, I was happy to let the monsters do the job. It was Tama with Miwah right now, as most others scattered around to drag the bodies away from our new "dwelling" as they put it.

Two of their smaller variants lurked nearby as well, playing at being guards. One of the monsters, particularly bloodied of the 'Purifiers' one, even had a helmet and had armed herself with a spear. I looked away before she got ideas, fire foxes were clingy as it seemed.

With my outfit off, I sat once more on the stairs of the looted shrine and inspected my slightly battered torso, with more than a few bruises sensitive to touch.

I moaned in displeasure at the mere movement, ignoring Miwah and Tama that kept me company.

"Does this hurt, Master?" Miwah asked

I winced, it was almost like a jolt of electricity passed my entire body. The subsequent rubbing of the spot didn't hurt as much, at least not always.

"This?" Another question, "And this?"

I shook my head, at the moment I probably had to let those two examine me, however, I doubted they had any medical proficiency whatsoever. I had, after all, none myself and merely want to see how bad it looked.

And it didn't look well.

"There are more black-and-blue marks on your back too. I believe that you would be in much more pain than that if your ribs were broken." Tama said: "We certainly shouldn't let any humans near you in the future, Master."

"Especially that woman," Miwah added.

This briefly pulled my attention away from how I felt, and more towards what I was going to do about my situation.

"There was something very unsettling about her," Tama said and pushed herself closer to me. She leaned in, in an almost theatrically seductive way and looped her hand around me in what felt like a possessive gesture. It didn't feel natural for the human, but she wasn't one, after all, with her fur covered body, vulpine features and lashing tail. Perhaps acting out the strange romantic movie was in line with the fiery anthropomorphic vixen.

I paused, keeping silent and thinking of the woman I ordered to be released. While on one hand, I had no desire to keep anyone locked in the cage, let alone one random lady I had never seen before, I still felt that with her gone, my chance to ever talk with natives was growing ever thinner.

"She can't speak to you that way! You are Master." The werewolf seemed agitated suddenly, with the snarling undertone to her normally feminine voice.

"Who? Tama?" I asked, slightly confused.

"No, Master. That human woman!" She replied.

"You understood her? Do you understand the local language?" I looked at her.

"No, Master." She didn't hesitate in answering. I wasn't particularly good at reading the expression on the canine face, but she didn't even flinch when I looked at her and gazed at me with blue, wolfish eyes. I wondered if it mattered who looks away first.

"So, why were you so upset by what she said if you didn't understand it?"

"She felt wrong," Miwah answered immediately

"Just looking at her made our skin crawl and our fur bristle." Tama supplied while holding at me even tighter. It did make a certain amount of sense. Well, the monster's clinginess didn't, but I believed it was just the part of how they were, it's not like they weren't affectionate before.

But I had experienced a very strange sensation from that strange woman's presence as well. All monsters seemed to be irked by her existence just the same as far I could recall, so it did add up.

"Her tone was so infuriating, especially after you were hurt…." Miwah leaned closer. Normal women usually didn't try to act openly affectionate, and receiving this level of attention from the two meters tall werewolf was, at least slightly, embarrassing. It felt that she was genuinely worried, judging from the tone of her voice, I could be misreading her. Was it because I was knocked out for a while, I wondered? Their level of protectiveness did puzzle me as I didn't think random people would normally care.

"Thanks for defending me." I tried to direct the conversation elsewhere and raised my hand to touch her face. Or muzzle rather, which was even more awkward, and would just invite being bitten if she was a normal animal. She seemed to be receptive though.

"If there were more of us we would have overwhelmed them before that brute could get close." She said.

It in this way confirmed that they indeed had memories of the event before their death.

Truth be told, with no real plan, no real solution and no way out, unless I had a tangible way to leave this nightmare, siding with the monsters given to me was probably for the best. However, their numbers rose after they killed enough people, and I didn't want more violence. Recollection of the past events slipped back in, disturbing and sickening, and I felt like I was breaking at the seams. I shook my head almost as if I wanted to shake the creeping thoughts off. It didn't help the slightest.

Without answering, I let her be and looked away, thinking, trying to hush my thoughts to focus on something slightly more manageable.

If I only had a way to get rid of the aches plaguing me right now. Problems of the body seemed easier to solve than problems of the mind.

The sudden sensation of Miwah's claws slowly skimming over my skin made me twitch. It was gentle, and it tickled in a way, but I had seen the werewolf tear the man's throat with those before. It made me shiver.

"Careful with those claws."

"I would never harm you, Master." She answered, purring and pushing herself even closer.

I wasn't comfortable with this level of attention and wasn't too keen to receive it, especially from the anthropomorphic wolf and fox, but with a sigh, I resigned to protest against it.

I was tired.

"Are there any beds around here?" I wondered aloud.

"They certainly had bedrolls, perhaps there is something in one of those houses," Tama said. There were four small buildings, aside from the pagoda structure, and only one of them, and all were broken into already.

"Could you please go and check?" I suggested and felt immediately guilty for ordering them around. But was equally uncomfortable to use a werewolf to keep warm.

"We are more worried about you since you were wounded."

"I'll be safe. I have guards." I argued, gesturing towards the other two who seemed quite alert, and quite jumpy. "Go find us a bed."

"Yes, Master." Both Miwah and Tama answered in unison. I realized too late they could take this in a weird way, but I let it pass.

I stood up, albeit with some difficulty as my whole body protested, and walked inside the shrine hoping for some peace and quiet at the moment.

While relatively spacious inside, and several stories high looking from the outside, the shrine itself was mostly limited to the single-chamber dominated by the four massive supporting columns, and the altar built to the wall opposite the entrance. Carvings were intricate, and in a certain way even opulent, reflecting incredible skill and dedication.

An outside glance didn't give this pagoda justice - most of it was drowning in shadows from the outside, but it came alive standing inside under the reflecting lights coming from the windows on the floor above. Mirrors were expensive in the times of old, so setting up this must have cost a fortune.

Instead of the statue of the Buddha, which I would expect to see all around various Asian countries, was the very detailed carving of the Eastern styled dragon looking down from the heavens, scrutinising petitioners that would gather there with its gaze. At least, I think that was what it was supposed to depict, judging from richly painted backgrounds, as the rest was ruined by looters who had pried and torn away most of the golden decoration it was seemingly supposed to have, at least judging from the bits and pieces still around. Some gold pieces were set in more firmly than others, so the artwork wasn't yet completely stripped out of the parts made of all precious metals they once contained.Some symbols, possibly letters I couldn't read were torn away while others still remained, the statue looked like someone took the potato peeler to once gleaming scales, with remnants of the gold plating still holding on some spots, and the statue's empty eye sockets gave it a creepy visage.

"I guess you aren't going to tell me how to get home?" I said in the direction of the altar.

There was no response, as I expected.

Celestial Dragon visualised by this intricate yet heavily damaged artwork was most likely imaginary after all. Or he could be very real, who could tell - in a strange world among monsters born from ruby mists it didn't seem that crazy concept. Perhaps he was too busy plotting the terrible revenge against those who desecrated his temple.

I sat on the ground, cross-legged, and called for the status screen, mostly to bring my mind away from the situation I couldn't resolve.

"Overview."

The Master
<The Root of all Evil, level 2>
Skills<Scorched Earth lvl.9>
<Slayer of Men" lvl. 6>
Units (Active)Tama, The Purifier Alpha
Miwah, The Eviscerator Alpha
12 * Purifiers
2 * Eviscerators
Units (In queue)6 * Purifiers (first in 33:12)
10 * Eviscerators (first in 12:21)

It appeared in the form of this floating overlay, as many times before. I watched the timer tick down, likely measuring the time until the bloody mist spat more monstrosities into this world, and was none the wiser than why any of it was even happening or what fueled it.

Since I saw them reappear quickly enough to rejoin the battle they perished in before, there must be some kind of logic.

"Master?" Girlish voices screeched behind me as two of my 'guards' crept closer to keep me company, and most likely get their share of attention in the process.

As the vulpine form of the 'Purifier' sneaked into my peripheral vision, and my nostrils were assaulted by the stench of blood, I also realized something.

"I will call you Helmy." I said to the monster that adored herself with the stolen helmet and knickknacks taken from her victims. Before I could reprimand myself for the fairly silly name, the system acknowledged my hasty decision and threw another overlay message in front of my eyes.

Unit named! Helmy, The Named Purifier
Skill "Scorched Earth Lvl.10" gained.

A red mist immediately gave birth to two more fiery fox monsters to plague this world. The new batch, along with the newly anointed one, affectionately piled on me with the usual "Master!" chant. There was a certain discomfort from having the affection of violent monsters, but they were paradoxically providing a certain level of safety in this strange, unknown world.

I shook them off, with difficulty, as my battered body opposed any exertion.

"Could you please go help others?" I said, and then added towards Helmy, the freshly named one: "And you won't get any hugs until you get clean."

They cried "For Master!" in affirmation, and hurried away giving me a certain amount of privacy for the moment. I was still surprised that orders were obeyed. I was hardly competent, let alone prepared, to command anyone. Even though this situation wasn't anything I could have really imagined happening.

With the gesture, I stopped the shadowy canine from getting closer to me, I had something else to confirm. A theory of the system was in a way good distraction from the cruel reality.

I called the information window back, watching the timer tick to zero.

Mini-werewolf, or the 'Eviscerator' how system dubbed those shadowy canines, materialized from the red cloud, returning back from the dead.

"Do you remember what happened before they killed you?" I asked her before she got too chummy.

"Master!" She answered in acknowledgement, and I figured out that smaller, lesser variants of monsters weren't as talkative as Tama and Miwah were. While they didn't really form any sentences aside from the simple two words, they were clearly sapient and weren't any less intelligent than then more grown kin. I saw it in a smaller werewolf's eyes same as I did so in Miwah.

"How many times have they killed you?"

"Master?" She came closer.

"You jumped in front of me when … humans … charged me with spears?" I tried. I had no way of knowing she was the first mini-werewolf I saw sacrificing herself, in the heat of the battle, and my following injury, I had no way of knowing what happened to particular monsters in that chaos. And they did look quite similar to me after all. But I just guessed.

Luckily for me, she confirmed with the resolute and proud "Master!" and even nodded in confirmation.

"Once?" I raised one finger. "Twice?"

She confirmed once more, twice it was. Their return among the living costs time, details of that arrangement, however, were impossible to deduce. Queries gave no explanation, only confused the poor creature. I didn't press her.

Instead, I hugged her - after all, without them, I would be already dead as I realize that humans didn't show much willingness to talk, aside from the single, sinister woman that becomes more sinister in the hindsight.

A mini-werewolf was enthusiastic about this display of affection and approved of it warmly.

"I'll name you Brave," I whispered.

Unit named! Brave, The Named Eviscerator
Skill "Slayer of Men" Lvl. 7" gained.

The red mist materialised another pair of appropriate monsters. And then a few more, as the countdown I didn't keep track of anymore finished, and the menagerie of slowly replenishing monsters soon turned into a small crowd.

I considered naming all of them.
 
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I realised that SV is unable to understand copy pasting text which is centred, and doesn't understand tables being copies over.
 
Interlude 1: The Princess
Hae Narim, the Crown Princess of Hanulbeol-guk, Beloved by the Gods, had been ecstatic when she realized that the ritual worked. Ecstatic but exhausted. She had sensed it, something had passed through from the Spirit Realm, answering her call.



She had known she shouldn't have been happy about disobeying her elders. They strongly advised against, or forbidden her even, to ever touch those cursed grounds in Surao Mountains. There, almost swallowed by the surrounding forest and nearly forgotten to anyone but the most knowledgable sages lay the ancient ruins of the Broken Temple, and within their strange carved stones slept the forgotten force. Hiding in plain sight, people in the nearby village didn't even dare to speak its true name.



Hae Narim dared. Desperate times had been calling for action now that Hanulbeol-guk had fallen to the Jin Empire's army. As invaders laid the siege on the capital, and even if the city could hold for months, nothing prevented the barbarians from pillaging the rest of the country. The war was close to being lost.



Narim had been tired, as she had channelled all her energy into the spell wishing for a hero - no, a miracle, a power to sweep away the so-called 'Great Jin' armies.



Ceremony completed, the antique scroll scattered by the wind, caster energy drained, she thought she could rest.



She was wrong.



The guards that had accompanied her were equally fatigued, as they had ridden day and night to reach this remote place.



What she didn't expect was that the enemies would catch them so fast. Briefly paralyzed by the ritual, with her mind just lingering at the edges between dream and waking from the ordeal, she didn't even realise her guards had been attacked until they fell before her eyes.

Jin soldiers seized her, shaking her out of her state.



She didn't have the strength to resist and looked for salvation elsewhere.



A stranger, a man she called from Spirit Realm, lay in the middle of the stone circle of the Broken Temple and two of Jin swordsmen stepped out, most likely intending to stab him while he was asleep. As was typical for those barbarians, Narim thought while weakly resisting Jin's brutes that held her. She wanted to fight them, but the toll the spell took on her was too high. She could barely stand.



Then the foreigner woke up and very ungracefully tried to flee from the two soldiers, to the edge of the cliff on which the Broken Temple stood. He almost fell over. Narim felt disgraced by his action. She didn't deem him to be like the hero she had hoped for.



He didn't see her, among the woods, she was certain, but at that point, she thought it didn't even matter.



The princess was certain the Jin captain would taunt her, but neither of them could predict what happened next.



The stranger spoke the Word of Power.



Narim didn't understand it. It was a foul, a dreadful word, and she could feel it's unnatural effect, its commanding presence on the material realm.



And with it, the barrier to the Spirit Realm broke as something answered his call. Unhuman, beast-woman covered with fur of fire, gleaming with energy. And without any hesitation, she burned both men alive as flames obeyed the beast's command.



There had been people that mastered Fire Art. Fire Star of the South was one, but he wasn't there. Maybe he wasn't even alive anymore, considering the state of the kingdom. But the beast-woman did the same with equal ease.



Though shocked, Jin soldiers tried to use archers to bring the stranger down, but he called another servant out from the Spirit Real to shield him from the rain of arrows.



Then his beast-woman set the forest ablaze. Jin archers burned in the greenery they were hiding in. The stench of burning wood and scorched flesh filled the area.



Narim heard the beast-woman laugh over the loud booms and crackling of the fire, only the grace of the Gods protected the princess when the blazing projectile tore through one of her captors, while the other fell to the claws of another she-beast.



The Jin captain brought the she-beast down. And even if he did it with ease, he utterly failed in restoring order as his unit fell to the ravaging fire beasts.



As the body of the creature dissolved into the red mist, and then into the nothingness, almost as if it was never meant for this world, the princess decided to use the opportunity to run as far as her weary legs could carry her. It felt like a sensible choice - it didn't matter who won that fight.



She could hear the screams behind her, and then, with the final boom came the silence.



Narim didn't get far, her legs gave up after a short while, her body still fighting the backlash from the ritual. Perhaps it was what killed everyone who tried before, perhaps it was what elders had warned her about, she didn't know.



The horses were gone, both hers and those of the Jin soldiers. They probably fled, startled when the whole commotion started, leaving her stranded in the hills. She decided to rest hidden among the bushes.



Narim could see the stranger collapsing on the road - she didn't know if he chased after her, and was weakened as she was, but he didn't remain alone for too long. Soon his beast-women were fawning over him, there were a dozen of them now.



She didn't understand their foul speech though, it made her skin crawl and Hae Narim did regret performing that forbidden rite that called them there. She did not know how to revert, nor how to utilize it. It wasn't what she had expected to happen. Jin were barbaric invaders, but would those disgusting beasts of fire be any better, she wondered.



Thoughts she had hiding here among the foliage were disturbed by the band of drunken commoners, likely bandits, stumbling into the stranger's bestial entourage and were slaughtered to the man.



Perhaps gods were smiling at the princess at that moment once again as the creatures didn't seem to know she was there, though they had the scent of the armed men before they even came close.



Narim used the chance to slip away, to continue through the forest downhill. There was a shrine to the Yellow Dragon, they had seen it on their way there, though they haven't stopped for rest, or paying respects.



It was a place of spiritual importance and the princess felt they could be drawn to it like a moth to a flame. A place as this would certainly drive away evil spirits, though as the Narim stumbled forward through the forest the spiritual taint and the stench became too apparent, and she soon ran into more soldiers.



Not Jin, but ones of Hanulbeol, though none of them wore the colours properly.



"Greetings, warriors of Hanulbeol-guk. This one is the Crown Princess…" She started immediately, with an authoritative, yet respectful and polite tone. The princess understood her difficult situation, yet she was pressed to maintain the decorum. Though she was of higher standing, she felt she did need to show…



It fell on deaf ears. The soldiers didn't care and attacked her, her protest futile, and probably would force themselves on her if they weren't stopped by the giant of the man that commanded them.



Hae Narim knew that man. It was Chae Sochun. He was a retainer of her father, sent to the south to raise an army for Hanulbeol-guk. She had remembered that by the point she was leaving the capital, it had been clear that help from the south was not coming.



While Sochun did stop these men and threw a few aside even with his impressive strength, they still seized her, as a prisoner. He exchanged a few sentences with them, in a southern dialect she and no one in the capital spoke or even understood.



"This is not proper…" Narim protested.



"No, it is not." Sochun agreed, "We don't do proper things anymore."



"But you swore…"



"As did your father! To feed all those who raise arms in defence of his reign! And there is no food left…"



"But by the king's edict, the granaries…"



He didn't let her finish.



"You lie. There were few of us left, and when we came asking for help, Gam Youngjae's men drove us away! Now we take what you owe us." He silenced her protests with the slap across her cheek, before ordering his men to drag her away.



She resisted, but even now, aftereffects of the ritual lingered making her body weak and draining her of energy.



They threw Narim into the makeshift cage along with three frightened women.



Narim had no idea what was going on here. It was obvious that the shrine had been looted, and Chae Sochun's men made the camp there, but other than that, nothing made much sense. Chae Sochun didn't even have a real army, his men were few, ew, less than a hundred in total, as far as she could tell. They looked worn out, more deserters than anything else.



"What happened here?" She tried to ask the other prisoner once the guard left them alone. A scared woman in the corner of the cage, in torn, dirtied clothes, apparently taken from one of the villages here.



She didn't get a reply.



Narim tried to ask again. She did her best to speak in a kind voice, but though they were women of lower birth than her, it did nothing. Perhaps they didn't know who she was, but it hardly mattered - they wouldn't talk to her as to fellow prisoners either.



The only answer she got for repeated questions was: "Soldiers."



She tried to press, to find out if they meant warriors of Hanulbeol, or Jin barbarians, or perhaps others, bandits and such, but no explanation was given. The shaking, impoverished girls weren't able to hold any conversation, huddled in the corner. The answer was always the same.



"Soldiers."



Hae Narim didn't want that suffering - she wished to help, but her energy was gone, and the gods were ignoring her plea for help, even if that prayer was for sake of the people of the kingdom, not herself.



Captives just repeated the same word, she couldn't expect any answers from them.



She realized she didn't know what was happening in the countryside until now, and she wasn't any wiser even when she found herself in the middle of it.



When the princess thought the gods didn't look at her with favour anymore, her power was diminished by the forbidden rite and she wondered if tribulation from the gods came in other forms than the lightning strikes from the heavens, then something happened.



The call from the alarm from outside was one she understood despite the dialect being so foreign to her. Stomping feet, shouting men and other signs of commotion sounded from outside the building that was also their prison. An attack, perhaps, she thought, a chance for them to be freed perhaps.



Though soon the cries became more desperate, and thundering booms and the stench of burned flesh brought her mind to the ruins.



A man, one of the soldiers, ran into the building and slammed the door behind him. Briefly, he looked for something to barricade the entrance but failing to find anything he hid in the corner, shaking and quietly babbling to himself.



A few final, dying screams came from outside, and then, the silence. The fight was over.



Hae Narim could swear she could feel the tug of the Spirit Realm. No being, living or dead, could return back from there, it was impossible, at least, until the ritual she now regretted.



A door flew open.



Nothing but the distorted light from the outside came in.



Then, the last cowardly soldier hiding in the corner died, torn apart by the monster that appeared from nowhere. A wolf-like mockery of the human and the animal, with the fur of shadows and mane of blood. It considered them - she considered them. Women wailed in terror.



Then, for a moment, Hae Narim had a brief, hopeful moment when she took a glimpse of the armour of the bright red and gold armour of the Royal Guard through the door.



Then it was immediately crushed. It was the stranger, fitted in the armour of one of her fallen guards, accompanied by the flock of his beast-women, bloodier ones clinging to him as some kind of the wicked pets.



Despite the armour, he looked foreign. His facial features weren't similar to one of Hanulbeol, and he didn't have traits of Jin invaders either. A light tone of his skin would perhaps be in line with people of the court, the princess observed, but his face was round, with a thin nose, and short hair. His look sufficiently foreign, he gave out a vicious, deeply unsettling aura even without his monstrous followers. The gaze of his dark eyes made Narim's skin crawl.



Narim stood up, defiant.



He barked out something, the language somehow more alien than others.



"This one is the Crown Princess of Great Hanulbeol-guk…" She introduced herself.



The response was unintelligible, there was something disturbing about the speech, yet the perceived hostility only made Narim more determined to not buckle under the unnatural influence.



"I used ancient ritual to call you there, to assist our lands against barbaric Jin!" She announced in the most regal tone she could muster. Deep inside though, she prayed for gods' protection.



She didn't know if her words were understood, but his bestial followers seemed deeply upset by it, growling viciously, their powers seeping through.



"I called you to this world, you should obey me!" She said and immediately came to regret her sudden burst of arrogance as the black beast-woman tore away the wooden cage, and grabbed the princess by the throat. Sharp claws dug into Narim's skin and she felt her death was drawing near.



Then, the stranger gave an order. Without the slightest hesitation, their monsters acknowledged the order of their foul language and lunged forward.



They brutally dragged them away, through the courtyard of the ruined shrine, and out, toward the road, uncaring about the wails and protests.



There were bodies everywhere, blood, gore and burnt flesh, monsters once again did slaughter everyone without mercy. There was a large body among the slain, scorched to the blackened crisp left in the pool of blood, which means Chae Sochun was dead as well. Though Narim felt he betrayed her father, she didn't wish that fate for the man.



It was almost shocking they didn't tear the women to pieces as well.



Instead, they dragged them in front of the gates of the shrine, leaving them be. The largest of them spoke in their obscene bestial tongue and gestured them away.



Narim didn't have to understand their alien tongue to understand the message they wanted to send.
 
Chapter 7: The Ambush


Naming the ever-growing pack of monsters started to feel like an unwise decision in hindsight.

They loved it. The batch that returned from the dead after the last battle gathered around me, almost like I was some form of celebrity, their screechy, girlish voices filled with excitement. Each one waited for their new name and a welcoming hug. I tried to accommodate and thought of new names, and played along with the expanding menagerie of anthropomorphic creatures thinking of some way to call each one of them.

It was evident that the invisible system behind their creation approved of this, which slowly turned into a problem of its own.

With each diminishingly inventive name given, skill associated with them rose up, and two more creatures materialized from the bloody mist, each one vying for their share of attention and pressed me to continue the vicious cycle further.

Eventually, it reached some invisible limit I didn't know existed, and no more of them were made. Finally, afforded some peace and quiet, I was relieved.

By that time, the furry cohort spilt over from the looted shrine and started rummaging through the camp we took over. I didn't stop them or even check on them. They had minds of their own, after all, and they seemed to have a better idea of what to do than I had. Freed from the distraction of making up names, the realization that I was in fact, lost in this world hit me again.

Not only did I not have any plan whatsoever, but I was also completely helpless, and entirely dependent on my current slightly creepy companions.

I pushed my mind in another direction: What should I do, or rather, how to communicate with locals? I didn't come up with anything other than trying the awkward gestures that would certainly be misinterpreted due to the cultural barrier involved.

The more I thought of it, the more helpless I felt. The monsters probably somehow felt my distress over this.

Not all of them left to cause trouble. At least a couple of them lurked nearby, in case I needed anything. Or in case I decided to run, I didn't know. They did come with a blanket, and I tried not to think about what happened to its original owner.

One of those lesser canine ones was over me almost immediately, pressing herself closer.

"Master?" She purred into my ear, sounding concerned.

Others did perk up at the same time.

It was like the whole issue with naming did make them a little bit more obsessive.

I tried to ignore her. I did poorly at that.

Back to the non-existent strategy of getting home. I assumed that perhaps if I found some sage or other educated individual, he might be a translator around here. I discarded it immediately.This hypothetical person might know other languages than their local one, though the chance it may be one I understood was almost non-existent…

How many people in medieval China know English? I wouldn't even understand actual medieval English, it used to be a different speech back in that time.

"Master. We found you the better clothes." Miwah announced, interrupting my thoughts.

I looked up. I noticed she actually put some parts of the armour on, which didn't fit her werewolf frame at all, but it was probably better than running around naked.

I stood up. A little pain reminded me of all the bruises I had.

She, along with another lesser tagalong, presented me with sort of a coat. Also, the trousers, in matching colours of washed-out blue-grey.

"You… you didn't strip it off of the… corpse, did you?" I asked, carefully.

"No. It was clean, drying as we found it," she said.

I thought better than to question the answer. I smelled the clothing, and it didn't reek of blood, or worse. A simple cloth, nothing more. I tried to put it on, struggling to adjust it properly as I had no idea how to wear the local garments, turning away they offered help nevertheless. The outfit, however, was better than nothing, and certainly more comfortable than the damn armour.

I was certain there was something meant to be worn under it too, but I didn't care that much at that point.

"We would find you better clothes later," she offered.

I immediately considered ordering them once again they couldn't kill anyone for it, but I paused and changed my mind. Realizing how dependent I am on them, I answered with "Thank you" instead.

I never got to continue that conversation. Noise coming from outside, along with the unmistakable and a strong smell of something burning, got my attention away from the petty issues with the attire. It made me rush outside.

There was a flurry of activity.

The monsters were sorting through the things they found or looted in a way that made sense only to them. Whatever the previous occupants amassed here, useful or not, it was promptly combed through. They made a blazing campfire even, and put some water to boil in the found iron pots. They even already got into hunting as well as I noticed so-called "Eviscerators' dragging in two dead deers. How they managed it, I didn't know. I didn't want to know.

"Master! Master!" The few monsters called as they prepared the sitting for me near the fire. I let it be.

The stench of burning was everywhere, but very few little vulpine pyromaniacs were in sight, which meant they were setting things on fire somewhere else. there was bound to be a lot of them, as my regrettable action did rack up the numbers if the crowd of shadowy canine types was any indicator.

It immediately made me worried.

I walked into the middle of the courtyard mess and looked around, finally noticing the smoke rising up above the surrounding woods. It was certainly noticeable for me and might be noticeable for the people in the valley, even if all that violence that got us to the point hadn't been. Another reminder is that I had no way of diplomacy without speaking the local tongue.

"They are burning the corpses," Miwah helpfully explained before I investigated.

"Did you run into more humans?" I asked carefully, almost afraid of the answer I might receive, and caught myself as I called people "humans" the same way as the monsters did.

"No, Master," she said.

"Where is Tama?"

"Preparing the bed for us, Master. There is one suitable … room, the rest was just an improvised camping site for humans." She gestured towards the other buildings surrounding the courtyard.

I shuddered at the mention of the bed, as I hoped it wouldn't come to that, but left it without comment. Instead, I sat in the place they designated for me near the roaring fire. It was getting cold.

The shadowy canine became a looming presence next to me, then lowered herself nearer, and it was probably her new slightly protective gear that prevented her from simply pressing herself to me.

"Miwah, could you send someone to…" I said, and after the brief silence trying to formulate my request, added, "... scout, down the road, to find out any human habitation? And uphill from where we came if there is some hint how…how we were summoned here?"

"Yes, Master," she said.

"Stay hidden, don't attack anyone," I added.

"Yes, Master." She nodded. Then, my werewolf-like companion briefly gazed into the distance, her eyes glassy, before her attention turned back to me.

First, I thought she simply opted to ignore me, but then I realized it was something Tama did when calling the 'Purifiers' scattered around the forest earlier - they may have some form of nonverbal communication between themselves. A few of the 'Eviscerator' types quickly dropped everything and disappeared into the woods, it didn't make a noticeable dent on those who stayed. It was still a crowd.

I was genuinely surprised they did follow any orders whatsoever as I was hardly a person worth following.

"Thank you."

"We are always there for you, Master."

I watched the butchery of the animals at the edge of the camp. Despite the messy job they seemed to do, they took upon it with gusto and only enforced my feeling of hopelessness over the entire situation.

A harsh truth was, I wouldn't last here a day without them.

"What is your plan now, Master?" Miwah started. "Humans had some food here stored, but it wouldn't last them for long. They have gotten it somewhere"

I nodded. I understood where she was heading, the fact they hunted proved that they needed food as much as humans would, and I had to admit to myself that I didn't really think of it outside of getting an answer on how to return home. I wasn't thinking from where the food would come from for me, let alone for … how many monsters now, I wondered?

"We don't know where we are and what is going on," I said, hesitantly, "How long will the food last?"

"I don't know." She-werewolf admitted, "But I hope we will be fine with hunting for a few days, a few more if we count whatever humans had in store there. Then we need to move to better hunting grounds."

This didn't put me at ease, I wasn't used to handling this kind of situation. Though a few days were better than nothing, it was a few days more than I would manage on my own if I were thrust into this situation alone - at least, I desperately tried to convince myself it will somehow sort itself out soon.

"Master?" Miwah leaned herself even closer. Though I was about to find out that this behaviour may be extremely common for them, it wasn't still comfortable enough for me.

"A moment, please, I am trying to think…" I put up the excuse.

"Overview."

The familiar floating window came up leaving me quite surprised by what should be really obvious by merely looking around. But I supposed I was always slow on the uptake.


The Master
<The Root of all Evil, level 2>
Skills<Scorched Earth lvl.20>
<Slayer of Men lvl.20>
Units (Active)Tama, The Purifier Alpha
Miwah, The Eviscerator Alpha
12 * Purifiers
28 * Named Purifiers
40* Named Eviscerators
Units (In queue)None



It was insane - their numbers more than doubled again, and even if they were currently peaked at some invisible capacity limit, there was no way of knowing if their population wouldn't start climbing again as I had no idea what the actual limits of the system were.

In any case, I wasn't able to lead the army, let alone know how to feed it.

I felt I was utterly incompetent when it came to leading them and wasn't certain if they would indeed listen to me any longer if things went south. As far as I could have known, 'Alpha' titled monsters were the ones supposed to be in charge, making me more of a nuisance.

"Master?" Tama's voice brought me back from pondering the status overlay, waving the whole thing away.

The vulpine woman was dressed in a red and white dress, decorated with embroidery of flowery patterns that probably had some significance beyond simple decoration, but I wasn't quite sure what it was. Maybe I saw the pattern in the shrine, I wasn't able to tell.

"It's quite surprising what those humans kept stashed there. I am certain it didn't belong to any of them," she answered my own unspoken question about where she got the outfit, and before I added anything she offered: "Or perhaps you would like…"

She didn't get to finish her flirty line as, suddenly, one of her lesser kin materialized from their usual puff of the ruby mist, this time without any heads-up that accompanied the new addition to the small, yet growing horde.

"Master!" She exclaimed, in her screaky voice. Since the smaller variants didn't really talk, I was confused for a short moment.

Then, the next one appeared, looking equally alarmed. And another. And another. And a few more, in short succession, made me realize that the system already started to churn replacements for monsters lost somewhere. And they were dropping like flies.

Though Tama did react immediately as the first one spawned, this time I didn't need her to realize what was painfully obvious.

"We are under attack!"
 
Chapter 8: The Master of the Horde
I quickly looked around, desperately trying to get a grasp of the situation.

Another 'Purifier' formed out of the ruby haze, one of too many.

"Master!" She said, exasperated.

"Master!" Repeated another.

I didn't say anything, couldn't bring myself to do more than stare, frozen even if I was aware of the vague sense of danger somewhere out there. I knew that they could, after some effort, even tell me what killed them in the first place, but I completely and utterly failed in directing them.

Occasional bursts of the bright fire flashed in between the trees as the monsters beyond the camp limit became aware of the assailants, and most likely attempted to fight back.

Unsuccessfully, red mist kept spitting replacements for the fallen. It gave me no idea how many enemies we might be facing, or why they were significantly more successful than before. I knew I should probably do something, anything, but I didn't know what exactly.

My heart raced, but my mind was blank, I had no solution to this. I was, once again, the observer, unable to act despite knowing I should.

More than twenty, maybe thirty 'Purifiers' were down only to be recreated in my vicinity, giving me a sense of this unseen threat.

Luckily for me, the monsters didn't need my direction. They didn't need me at all, I thought, overwhelmed by the sense of helplessness and uselessness.

The assembling cohort of monsters didn't wait though. Tama and Miwah took a back-to-back stance with me pressed in the middle, either to shield me from the attack or to simply imply prevent me from fumbling between them and the enemy.

Tama start lobbing a few fireballs into the forest where they detonated violently, almost at random, evidently trying to blast the large area without me even having the chance to really see what she was aiming at. A shrine and its few supporting structures were still situated in the middle forest, with trees blocking the view from the direction the buildings were not.

Respawned 'Purifiers' massed around me and formed a defensive circle. Instead of chasing the unseen enemy hiding in trees, they held back.

There must have been thirty of them, a sizeable crowd, all recreated after the adversary that took them out very quickly. I could feel their restlessness, their anger, twitching tails and ears, ready to release their flaming powers.

Rest took a different approach: All the 'Eviscerators' disappeared into their cloak of invisibility at masse, leaving only the floating patches of distorted air behind, impossible to tell where any of the individual shadowy canines were. A sweeping gaze around the courtyard gave the impression of the desert mirage for a short moment before it all went still.

At that point, all the fiery vulpine variants were slain and reborn, gathering around me, with only a handful of survivors retreating back to camp on foot. Those few remained lurking on the edge of the clearing, stepping back and forth, probably the lookout.

Tama threw another few blazing bolts into the surrounding greenery, with a few more explosions and starting a few more localized fires flickering in between the gaps of trees.

For a short moment, there was silence, with only gusts of wind sweeping the forest, carrying the smell of burning everywhere.

Only a few 'Purifiers' loitered around at the edges of the camp where they made an easy target, seemingly at random, though I could barely see them sandwiched between my protectors.

"For Master!" They chanted in their screechy voices, taunting the enemy with the only words they seem to speak: "For Master! For Master!"

Then I took a glimpse of it, the movement among the greenery.

One shadow. Two. Three at the very least.

A figure pounced out of the cover of the bushes, and with a single slash of his blade cut the lone fox monster apart, its blood splattering everywhere.

That was what 'Purifiers' waited for.

In an instant, the area was set ablaze in one massive conflagration before the body even hit the ground.

An attacker, a figure in the dark flowing robes, gushed away the flames with a swing of the sword before disappearing into the woods, in almost a dance-like move, only to motivate the fiery monsters to simply incinerate all the possible cover.

"For Master!"

Another lone 'Purifier' lurking too close to the trees fell to the blade. As bait, I finally understood the purpose of the stragglers not seeking the safety of the rest of the mob.

The stealthy assailant escaped the flames more narrowly than before as more of the greenery around was being scorched, and another few more explosions swept the offending leaves and bushes, and with it, places to hide.

Another seemingly careless 'Purifier' was dead, carved apart by the sword, the enemy even more narrowly escaping with their flowing black robes briefly catching fire as proof they aren't entirely immune to the power.

An assassin rolled back into the cover narrowly evading being roasted alive.

The next patch of scrubs went away with the blast. The perimeter of the camp slowly turned into an inferno, with the only approach being either through all heat or in between the buildings.

I took a glimpse of them. The trio of black-dressed figures dashed away from the fiery destruction, only to disappear as they left my view once more.

A burning tree collapsed on the ground crushing that ornamental gateway, and both went down in the cloud of dust, rubble and flames.

In another few, tense seconds that felt longer than they actually were, the enemy made a move.

Then, all of the sudden, two of those black-robed assassins, took the opportunity to slip in between the buildings to leap straight at us cutting down whoever stood in their way.

They killed the few 'Purifiers' with effortless ease, spraying the area with their blood. I, once again, just froze, couldn't make myself move regardless of what was happening in front of my eyes. One of the smaller vulpines took the swing intended for me with her own body, while Tama pushed me away.

The Assassins' moment of triumph was immediately overturned as they were jumped by thirty 'Eviscerators' appearing from the thin air and attacking them from all directions in a massive, vicious ambush.

Even extensively outnumbered, and surprised, those black-robed warriors could fight. They slew a couple of Eviscerators in an impressive display of the logic-defying sword skills, but ultimately they succumbed to the sheer numbers mixed with the fearless ferocity of the monsters.

As the two mysterious warriors died screaming, literally torn apart by bloodthirsty monsters who tore him limb for limb in a horrifying display of rage, an uncaring system announced another of those messages invading my view once more.



Two Major Enemies were killed. Level 3 achieved. Unit cap doubles.


Abruptly, everything around me was this ruby mist. A bloodlike haze that had taken the bodies, and made them anew, one that has been giving birth to the monsters too many times already, fueling the grinder… yet they never did it on such scale as it did now.

For a few seconds, everything was this crimson murk, and then everything was monsters.

"Master! Master!" A small horde cried in unison, giggling in their triumph, enemies dead, their numbers growing.

Abruptly though, a missile - not a projectile, sword, thrown as one in the way I wouldn't think was possible - pierced through a couple of monsters only to end up lodged deeply into Miwah's chest. Even that scavenged armour she wore didn't help. I didn't realise it until droplets of warm blood landed on my face.

She shielded me from harm once again.

The werewolf collapsed on the ground into the puddle of gore, a blade of the long sword protruding from her chest. I threw myself to her, without any thought, without an idea what exactly I would or should do, only to watch her slowly fade away while coughing blood. Her blue wolfish eyes showed no fear, but I was terrified, despite the fact I saw her perish already only to be re-created to fight again.

The horde of monsters sparked into action long before that. They caught up to the last assassin very quickly, I heard the human cry in pain as he burned.

Major Enemy killed. One more to advance the General level.

I tried to stop the bleeding with my hands. I couldn't. Miwah breathed out, coughed out the last, and the ruby mist claimed her, body and all the gore disintegrating into the wind, with the mismatched pieces she wore falling to the ground with nothing to hold them. A few eyeblinks later, she was no more.

And in a few beats, she was back among the living, unharmed and whole.

I hugged her. She was perfectly comfortable with that, it even inspired a few of her smaller lookalikes to join. It wasn't the right place, and it certainly wasn't the right time, but they didn't seem to mind it at all.

Perhaps they were always affectionate, even in moments like this, or perhaps it was a good way to put the obstacle between me and ranged attacks.

They pushed me down, while others watched their surrounding. No more attacks came, however, everyone seem to stay alert. Few slipped away to the crowd, possibly to confirm we are, indeed, alone.

"I don't want you to die for me. I don't want anyone to die for me," I said. I had enough of all that fighting.

"I don't die unless you do. Stay alive, Master." Miwah answered, her voice pleasant and calming. Unlike me, she was completely undisturbed by the idea of death and violence. Recreated by the system each time she perished, she may not have a human perspective on dying, I realized.

I still wasn't accepting the sacrifices made.

Another three monsters respawned nearby. I flinched, expecting another assault. It didn't come.

"Three enemies dead. One got away. He is badly wounded he won't get far." Tama concluded. For a moment, I didn't do or say anything, lost, slightly confused, I merely held on to Miwah. She didn't object.

"Don't chase him, it could be a trap," I said. The only reasonable thing I had done since the start of the ambush. Though I was concerned, I wanted to be cautious.

"Only a couple of us, as long as we have the scent, we will hunt him down." Miwah objected and I could feel her tense, as she once again gazed blindly in the distance. I was more certain now it was their way to direct their lesser kin, even at distances, though I was not in the mood to question her ability. As uncomfortable as I felt before getting close to them, I still kept holding onto the shadowy werewolf, for some reason, I couldn't explain to myself, let alone them.

They, however, seem to act like this was perfectly normal behaviour, just until Tama remarked:

"I am starting to feel a little jealous, Master," Tama remarked, in an almost teasing tone, just like other monsters the fire vixen was entirely nonchalant when there was no immediate danger present, and entirely ruthless there was one.

All of a sudden, I started to feel awkward about the entire thing though I began to feel that I find the presence of my monsters calming, a safe place in the storm that was this entire world I was unwillingly thrust into.

So I pushed away from the hug, slowly uncomfortable with the fact that 'my monsters' line of thought.

I looked around. While the buildings were mostly intact, a lot of greenery was badly scorched and smouldering, with a few flickering flames at some spots and the persistent stench of burning lingered in the air, heavy and unpleasant. Assailants met their brutal end, and I better not looked in that direction.

"I hate this world." I sighed.

It was frightening how quickly Tama reacted to that remark:

"Yes, Master. We will see this world burn."

As unsettling it was on its own it also helped me realize the scale of what 'my monsters' posed - there were, once again, more of them. Much more, significantly, with a gathering crowd around. They looked at me, with an expectation in their eyes, and some even yelped the usual "Master!" line at me.

I was nervous.

"Thank you, thank you all!" I said to them. I didn't sound confident, at least to my own ears, and it was the worst speech ever. But I meant what I said.

I was answered with a cry by their screechy girlish voices cheering "For Master!"

Definitely more uncomfortable with the attention I was given, I stayed silent and didn't even react to Tama that decided it was her turn hanging to me. Sensing the most crushing expectations, I tried the command them, something I wasn't competent in, let alone comfortable with, doing. How does one feed an army?

"Hurry out, ladies. Secure this camp so we can all rest." Was the best I came up with. The gathering of monsters erupted in a flurry of activity.

The fact they still eagerly accepted orders despite I couldn't do anything to help them was still a small shock.

I started to feel the weight of responsibility and was already slightly distressed by my future prospect when I asked for the "Overview". It confirmed that I had all the reasons to be at the very least worried about the future.


The Master
<The Root of all Evil, level 3>
Skills<Slayer of Men lvl.20>
<Scorched Earth lvl.20>
<Third skill not selected>
Units (Active)Tama, The Purifier Alpha
Miwah, The Eviscerator Alpha
48 * Purifiers
28 * Named Purifiers
40* Eviscerators
40* Named Eviscerators
Units (In Queue) 4* Purifiers, first respawn in 57:23

One again, I silently asked myself: How could one feed an army and what would happen if my monsters went hungry? I almost shivered at the thought. Their numbers rose at an insane rate.

Their numbers were fueled by the conflict, I suspected that stronger or more numbers the enemies, more creatures had to be thrown at the problem to make it go away - until the solution became the problem.

With my mind concentrated on the possibility easy, almost magical solution to this issue, the upcoming crisis, I tried the more obvious command.

"Select third skill."

I was a little surprised this actually worked, and the new screen invaded my vision in its usual monochromatic blandness.

Select your third element
Skill: "Tyrant of Stone"Element: Earth
Skill: "Green Hell"Element: Wood
Skill: "Terror From Above"Element: Air
Skill: "Harbinger of Extinction"Element: Death
Skill: "Great Devourer"Element: Life
A result which was almost as equally worrying as it was unhelpful, with little explanation of what to expect after I selected one of those options. There doesn't seem to be any logic behind why this should be called 'elements'. Naming convention behind the skills was somewhere between irritating and ominous - I thought later, as there was nothing even remotely exciting or cool about any of it when all this madness actually happened to the person.

With a deep breath and brief consideration, I made my choice.
 
Chapter 9: The Great Devourer
I felt suddenly pressed to make up a quick solution.

Around me, the frantic crowd of monsters did everything that in their mind classified as securing the camp, from disposing of the bodies of the assassins to trying to fell a tree. Perhaps they would seriously try to build the palisade, perhaps they just wanted to get rid of places enemies could hide in. Or simply disliked the scenery, anything was possible.

I left this up for their consideration

I only wanted for this nightmare to end, find the answer, and stay alive until it did.

To not let my monsters go hungry was another goal. They were already very aggressive as they were.

They hunted. It meant they still needed to eat, even if death was something of a vague concept for them. Whether it was merely to stave off the unpleasantness associated with starving, to fuel their magic, a combination of both or any other unimaginable mechanic, I didn't know and didn't want to..

Selecting the right skill seemed to be a solution to the most pressing matters.

Last time, when I first discovered there was this status screen, I was too confused, too scared to think in terms of skills, powers, and their implications. Back then, I hesitated, and the cursed system behind this nightmare made a selection for me. Miwah and her shadowy canine kin were brought to this world based on the logic I couldn't comprehend.

Even if she wasn't what I wanted, I owed the black werewolf my life.

I still wanted to have a choice in this whirlwind of violence.

Haunted by the flashbacks of both my monsters and humans dying, I was immediately attracted to the element that promised the means to minimalise the suffering through some form of healing power - Life - and even if the wording of the skill was ominous at best, or contradictory at worst, the element part was sufficiently vague to cover the wide variety of effects.

I needed something that wasn't inherently offensive skill in nature. Source of sustenance. Even ones in the category which system called 'Element: wood' didn't seem to be an all-encompassing resolution. I felt there is a better option. After all, what was the biosphere with plants and animals than the life itself? There was a slight possibility that there was entirely benevolent power hidden behind the ominously sounding skills. There was always hope.

Tama, still affectionately hanging to me, gently beckoned me with her muzzle. I assumed she could see the screen floating in front of my eyes too, or was instinctively able to sense it was there. She, just like other creatures, creatures, never questioned the fact I was inspecting them.

I tried to ignore her, I had other things to worry about.

Now the adrenaline of the imminent danger was gone, the ache of my chest, spine, and entire body even, reminded me of how battered and bruised I was, and the ability to heal felt more like the answer too.

I was sold on the idea of preventing the loss of life, and within the broad sense of what something as vague as 'life' could cover there was a chance, it might sort all kinds of problems into one.

After giving myself brief mental encouragement, I spoke my choice:

"Select skill Great Devourer."

It flashed through my mind that it wasn't a correct keyword to prompt the selection, but it reacted momentarily, with yet another notification popping out in my light of sight. Satisfied it worked, I waved it away.

Skill "Great Devourer lvl.1" gained.
As many times before, a new monster was born to the world from the red mist.

Remaining true to the pattern, it took the form of another anthropomorphic animal, this time it was a rat or some similar rodent with grey-brown fur, unmistakable large ears, a typically shaped snout, and quite noticeable red eyes. Of course, the monster was once again, female. Though smaller than me, and more petite than the ones like Tama or Miwah, she still has elegant feminine curves, which her fluff even accentuated. Like the others, she stood on digitigrade legs, had a long bare tail, and her feet and hands sported sharp grasping claws.

"Master." She acknowledged me with a bow and a smile. I was still a little amazed at how familiar, human-like expressions they were able to show. Her stare was uncomfortable, there was something uncanny about the eye colour.

"Master?" She asked, and put on a questioning look.

"Oh, sorry. I was…" I answered, paused and immediately switched to a different topic as I felt a certain awkwardness. I never questioned them about their abilities before: "Do you have the ability to heal, I assume?"

There was no way of telling what they could do - but thinking of it now, perhaps they expected me to know.

"Yes, yes, I will make you feel better, Master!" The rat woman replied immediately and eagerly. She, like the others, had a pleasant voice that didn't fit her form, as seemed to be a pattern behind all of the creatures.

She offered me her hand. I took it.

"Come, Master!" she squeaked out, her liveliness filled me with great expectations for something positive this time.

What surprised me was that she didn't use any clearly unnatural ability on me directly, instead grasped my hand almost like she wanted to show me something instead. Unsure of what to expect, I still let her. She lead me to the edge of the camp where the forest remained untouched by the magical flames or other attempts to destroy the forest.

There, she made a grasping gesture with her free hand almost as if she wanted to violently squeeze something unseen in between her claws. I could only watch as the trees around us started to rapidly wither and die in front of my eyes, choking under the sicky emerald glow that suddenly engulfed them, draining them of all their life. Monsters in the vicinity briefly paused in their frenetic work to laugh giddily as this had the clearly opposite effect on them, almost like they revelled in the jolt of energy. They resumed what they were doing even with greater enthusiasm, and their occasional screechy chants.

Tama was even more cuddly, and the new monster seemed pleased with herself.

I felt much better as well, rejuvenated even. At least, physically. The fact we now stood in the large patch of dead, blackened vegetation did crush my mood, along with the hope for benevolent power that could be used to build the bridge between us and the locals. I suddenly didn't feel like inspecting whether the bruises I suffered earlier were still there.

"Thank you. I feel much better" I said, truthfully, but cautious not to encourage further environmental destruction, or not to show any discomfort.

Deep inside, however, I felt somewhat guilty that I didn't foresee this. It was more than obvious. How could I think that anything good would come from the skill called 'Devourer'?

I took a deep breath.

"I hope this won't hinder our ability to hunt for food. We need to eat, and there is no better food source just yet..." I said. It wasn't difficult to come up with the pragmatic sounding line to say, especially after I noticed Miwah eyeing the devastation caused by something I could describe as life-drain. I started to hate myself for it, but being in the middle of the bustling camp of a hundred or so aggressive monsters set a certain kind of peer pressure.

"...Miwah said we would have food from hunting for days," I added, subtly suggesting that it would be unwise to use this on a larger scale as it would inevitably lead to total destruction of the local ecosystem, and with it, the sources of food. It was significantly more distributive than overhunting would.

"Yes, yes, it will not, Master," the rat monster said with a vigorous nod, and provided a surprisingly bookish explanation: "I am confident I can sustain us once prey becomes scarce on the life energy in the environment until we find better sources of nourishment."

It wasn't the way out of the trouble I was looking for, but I didn't object to what was being said with a mental note of what I should pay attention to when selecting a skill. After the awkward silence, I directed the conversation elsewhere.

"Excellent. Thank you. What should I call you? What about calling you…" I said, with another long pause to think of some entirely random name, then breathed out: "Narita!"



Unit named! Narita, The Defiler Alpha
Skill "Great Devourer lvl.2" gained.


The system answered faster than the monster in question had the chance to show her own opinion on the matter, with three more of her lesser kin formed out of the outburst of the bloody haze. I didn't want to name them as well, not only as my imagination felt seriously diminished at this moment, it didn't feel like the wise choice. It could only end in another population explosion, and with it, a sliding scale of destruction caused on everything around us

"Narita," a freshly dubbed creature tasted the word and with another nod, confirmed, "Yes, yes. I like it, Master."

"Master! Master!" Her only slightly smaller versions seconded her speech with the chant.

"Thank you," I said, mostly in an attempt to be polite, without much thought put into what I was saying. I was, in fact, quite out of the possible lines I could have thought of. I could already feel the mental exhaustion set in and I found it very difficult to think, but there was no running away from this at the moment. The thought of running did remind me that in the foreign land, with a hostile population, there was nowhere to go.

If only I had the time to think, to get my bearing.

"Any ideas what to do so we aren't jumped by more enemies?" I tried.

"I don't think there are any more humans nearby anymore," Miwah said and sniffed the air, almost like she wanted to use her much sharper senses to verify the claim.

"We will keep you safe, Master," Tama added, keeping herself close. She was, as many times before, creepy, though slowly, I felt a certain sense of safety from their presence.

Instead, I tried to work my brain towards what felt like the proper, leadership decision, to address yet another outbound crisis with a load of associated dangers involved.

"If we aren't close to any settlement, from where those guys come from? We aren't here for long, even." I waved my hand in no direction, in particular, referring to the black-robed assassins that came. Then I realized something.

"Unless they didn't come for us." I said. I freed myself from Tama's embrace and looked at her, the fiery vixen still wore that fancy dress which certainly couldn't belong to most people we met - those were almost universally men, ranging from the dirty-looking bandit types to ones that looked like proper soldiers, at least for the certain time period. Aside from the prisoners we released, we didn't meet a lot of women.

Perhaps there was something of value there, in this blasted camp, we didn't have any idea even existed.

Tama noticed my gaze and remarked in her sultry tone: "Oh, Master."

I wasn't in the mood for the game.

"You said that humans collected a lot of things in there," I said, "Anything valuable in there? Could you show me?"

"Oh, yes, Master," she confirmed. Tama took my hand under my shoulder, in a quiet ladylike manner and Miwah, not going to be outdone, did the similar on my other side. I silently reminded myself to rather not protest.

Narita, and her three kin, opted to trot behind us, in some form of retinue.

I briefly glanced at the small horde of monsters running their seemingly chaotic, but somehow purposeful chores. Attempting to cook the meat from the deers they hunted previously made sense. Sharpening sticks did not. Or blasting trees, attempting to use their fire to make cutting easier - I flinched when the tree collapsed down with the rustle of leaves followed by the loud thud. I opted not to question why they do certain things, relying on their judgement. I was too tired for that.

Tama and Miwah led me through the camp and into one of the remaining buildings I never had the time or mood to inspect for whatever was hidden in there. In addition to the looted pagoda proper, and the makeshift prison which certainly wasn't the intended part of this strange place, there were two more houses built in a similar style that evoked vaguely Eastern Asian design stereotypes.

I left it be and stepped inside the house.

It was mostly one large room divided into two with barely present thin internal walls, with windows mostly made of what I assumed was either paper or loosely knitted fabric, in line with this vaguely Chinese, or perhaps Korean or Japanese, mixed aesthetics of everything around here had.

I assumed it was originally intended as a living space, there was still that sleeping pallet, a large futon in the centre.

This wasn't quite a peasant hut, I imagined, but definitely not a resident of the rich either. Perhaps the priest was supposed to live here originally, there used to be a shrine, after all. It was also quite clean, which was certainly positive.

Clean, however, meant the notable absence of dirt or stench, not the overall tidiness of the place - the rooms were a mess. Whoever originally slept before we came in converted it into something of a storage area for somewhat valuable items.

This strange stash has a little bit of everything: from makeshift crates, hiding the pottery containing who knows that, to a few painted valuable-looking chests, to various clothing haphazardly scattered around. A couple of armours and various weapons as well.

It wasn't hard to guess someone gathered seemingly expensive stuff here, but I didn't care about it properly, almost like it belonged to some rather obsessive hoarder than a truly rich individual. Or monsters rummaged through it already, turning this into absolute disarray. Or a combination of both, which was the most likely scenario.

Once again, I freed myself from the clinch of two of my monsters and tried to go through all the trash gathered there. There were some pieces which must have cost a lot of money in this world - a few torn-out ornaments made of gold and silver wrapped in the buddles of cloth were such a thing. Perhaps they were stolen temple decorations.

"And other buildings?" I asked while inspecting what seemed to be a symbol made out of poured silver.

"A pantry and the tool shed, then that room with the cage," Miwah answered this time/

I went through several other items I found and put them back when they were. While some of them would probably cost a lot of money on the proper market, I didn't need any of them really.

When I got my hand on another, gold-coated piece hidden among the cloth, it wasn't hard to guess it was a letter, or symbol, used in their writing, even if I had zero ideas what it actually read. It wasn't hard to speculate on the origin of the broken pieces either - which made me think if one could really make money out of the stoled religious items without accusation of sacrilege.

"...why looting the temple, and just stashing it nearby?" I said, speaking to myself after, "Why pry it away and don't go to sell it?"

"We still need to find out where humans congregate, Master." Miwah offered a quite reasonable answer, though I could feel from their tone of voice she found the idea of humans somewhat repellent: "Trade should be concentrated around the large population centres."

"If the artwork cannot be sold, they would bother…" I continued my tangent, "There must be someone willing to buy the pieces of gold and silver. There could even expect someone to come by and buy those from them in exchange for something else…"

Which reminded me of the bodies left there on the road, left to rot, which would certainly discourage people from trading with someone who was ambushing travellers or caravans.

"…which doesn't matter because we can't speak the local language!" I growled, "We can't reason with them, because we can't understand them!"

Suddenly, a pent-up frustration flared and I couldn't help myself but slam the useless object across the room, grabbing another thing in reach, a small piece of metal I didn't even look at, before dropping it on that futon in the middle completely frustrated by the whole situation. The shiny treasures and baubles were entirely useless unless I knew what they meant, they didn't bring me any closer to home.

"Master?" Tama asked lowering herself to me, sounding concerned, "You can't worry so much about humans. They aren't like us."

I sighed, I almost wanted to retort something, but I couldn't - it was rather hard to argue I was a human if I couldn't even talk with the people of this land any more than the random critter would. Frustration was replaced with sadness.

I looked at the foxy face, into her yellow eyes which showed her surprising concern, then looked at the shiny bracelet - an item which I grabbed and still didn't throw out, even during my outburst.

"Here," I took Tama's hand and passed her the bracelet, "It will match beautifully with your eyes."

"Really, Master? Thank you," she said, in a more teasing tone.

Then I looked at the others that came with us, at towering Miwah and slightly confusing Narita with her three kin.

"Use the armour, weapons, or whatever you think is useful from there," I told my companions, spread myself on the sleeping pallet and looked up to the wooden ceiling.

"If some human who looks like a merchant or something similar approaches, I want him captured alive!" I ordered. I detested giving orders - I was hardly a brain behind the operation.

"Yes, Master!"

I hated all of it, the helplessness, the lack of answer, the role I was pushed into without any idea how to perform it, the chaos, the violence, this world even.

I sighed, but it was pointless to rage against fate, or whatever really brought me into this twisted, ancient-looking world I gathered myself once more and got back on my feet, and with all false confidence I didn't really have, I convinced myself to say:

"So, what I should do to help you with to make his place livable?"
 
Interlude 2: The Landlord
Viceroy Gam Youngjae hated acting as the tax collector, just as he hated taking an active role in putting down all those bandits and deserters that roamed his lands.



They kept stealing what was rightfully his, and it annoyed him greatly.



He felt that his direct intervention was so beneath a man of this high standing, and it irked him even more.



It was, regrettably, necessary, as he was unwilling to give up his plans and ambitions now, and couldn't afford to trust others in their execution. Not now.



At least so he thought as he rode in the front of the column of his men, spending the long journey back to his fortress submerged in thoughts.



He has been trying to gain the king's favour for years to no end. All that time he had spent weathering the endless, petty court intrigue while fulfilling every task, every demand the fickle monarch could think of, however, had finally borne fruit when the great ruler finally acknowledged his effort and rewarded him greatly both in the function and the land. He rose above the ranks of typical gentry and was now the owner of vast swathes of land, which in combination with his new title of Viceroy, brought much envy from his former peers.



The Viceroys were the officials appointed by the king to rule the various provinces in his stead, and were, by necessity, powerful men. Youngjae's ambition was greater still. It was the position of the Grand Chancellor, the advisor to the king, a man who could influence the ruler's decision rather than merely interpret his wishes in a remote province like this one.



These dreams of becoming the second most powerful man in the country quickly dissipated when the accursed war broke out.



Those damnable Jin, he thought. Their so-called great empire invaded with the intention to conquer all of Hanulbeol-guk, and much to Youngjae's dismay, they proved to be more than capable adversaries. Everyone was underestimating those barbarians, the viceroy scoffed.



A new army could have been raised in southern provinces and marched up north, to fight the invaders, and clash with Jin. It was exactly on the border of the region he was given governance over.



After the great battle, both forces scattered, with the survivors from both sides roaming the land, turning to banditry, or pillaging the countryside for the spoils. While it had spared Youngjae from the necessity to fight in a decisive, deadly battle, it also created a hundred small issues he had personally attended to if he ever hoped to have true control of the area. His presence out in the field was proof that he was, indeed, still in power, and directly collecting the taxes and tribute was the only way to make sure it wasn't lost on the way.



War, however, didn't end up there - Jin had split their forces beforehand, and had more than enough men to lay the siege on the capital.



He could sense it, the foreshadowing of the impending collapse.



It could last months until invaders would give up, or until the starved royal city and the king trapped within would ultimately surrender.



He was, nonetheless, forming a plan.



Gam Youngjae had no intention to join that fight, instead relying on the fact that the whole matter would be decided before anyone even decided to conquer his lands specifically. They may be valuable, but they weren't the richest ones in the kingdom and thus wouldn't be prime targets to plunder.



Instead, he aimed to merely secure his vast holdings against the riffraff produced by that pointless scuffle and let someone else decide the fate of the kingdom. He would stockpile goods, and food, hoard the gold and silver, and simply wait out this storm, and in a worst-case scenario, pay Jin their tribute to keep them off his lands.



Should Great Hanulbeol-guk win, Viceroy would present himself to His Majesty the King as the capable custodian who kept the lands in order, to show the province untouched by the war and let others have warriors fame.



The king didn't appoint him the General of his armies, after all, he was supposed to quickly fill the granaries as the newly levied armies would have to be fed as they fought out the enemies endangering the kingdom. And stockpiling he did, just as the king wished. A fitting role, he thought. After all, those braver and more skilled in the ways of the war tended to die an appropriately heroic death on the battlefield, and Youngjae had no intention of dying.



And should Jin win?



He had an idea too.



He had the Crown Princess!



He hadn't quite believed it the moment the lone, lost Crown Princess Narim stumbled upon him and his men, but there was no mistake that he now had the most prized woman in the kingdom as a very valuable guest of honour.



Alone, on the road, separated from her guards, it was an almost eerily unlikely situation to happen, though not entirely impossible in his own mind. It was still, unmistakably, her, with her simile appearance, and her almost magical aura of royalty.



While he hesitantly doubted the tale about the beasts called from the Spirit Realm (no one had that kind of power), he didn't doubt that Royal Guards would sacrifice their lives in her protection, telling her to run when overwhelmed by Jin. It would leave her in the situation they found her in.



But, whatever the reason was, her presence was most welcomed. Not only was the Crown Princess a woman of peerless beauty and blessed by the gods, as the clergy annoyingly tend to remind everyone, but now, without male descendants to succeed the king in the case of his death, she was the sole heiress of Hae dynasty. While she would unlikely rule herself, it would inevitably be her future husband that would sit on the throne of Hanulbeol. Tradition demanded that the king select an appropriate man for her to marry from the high-standing officials within the country. At least, that is what he would have done if the war hadn't broken out.



Gam Youngjae had to smile - it didn't matter if she was to be returned to her family, or turned over to Jin to help them legitimatize their rule should they win, each option depending on where the pendulum of war swung. She was a bargaining chip Viceroy could use for his own benefit.



"Viceroy Gam, when are you going to send troops to assist the capital?" the princess riding next to him suddenly spoke.



"Your Royal Highness," he answered immediately in the most polite tone he could muster, "this one doesn't have the men to aid the capital."



He would be normally expected to bow, but since it was impossible on horseback and in his quite stiff armour, he thought he could be excused for not following the proper decorum in this extraordinary situation. Mentally, he silently bemoaned the fact he had to leave his comfortable, expensive robes behind, as he would rather suffer from the court pleasantries again than be forced into the field, but such was his burden.



It wasn't an appropriate way for the Crown Princess to travel either, a royal carriage or the sedan chair were expected, but it was what they could manage in the current situation. She was also slightly inappropriately dressed for the occasion, with her rich proper robes dirtied, after all.



"Your Royal Highness," Youngjae said, "please be reasonable, we don't have the men to fight Jin. Their army is at least twenty thousand strong, what meagre forces we have here aren't enough to fight them."



Even if she didn't make any strange or outlandish demands, the Viceroy's experience in the court suggested that not all people close to the King were reasonable.



While it was true that he didn't have enough men to fight the Jin invasion off or even delay it, he wasn't sure how large a force Jin had at the moment. Before the princess gathered her breath for the answer, he continued.



"Your Royal Highness! I am following the order of His Majesty, to fill the granaries, to feed the armies marching north against Jin! Not to mention to fight off all that dishonourable riffraff that rebelled against His rule!"



He paused, and exclaimed, "Help for the besieged capital is surely coming!"



It was impolite behaviour, but Youngjae trusted he could be excused - after all, there were a lot of people to blame for this situation before him, from the appointed General losing the battle against Jin to the incompetent Royal Guards unable to ensure the safety of Crown Princess.



Luckily for him, the Princess was seemingly satisfied with the response and didn't seem to take offence from the slightly insolent behaviour which was excellent. She stayed silent.



The Viceroy was happy with this outcome. As long as Hae Narim remained gullible to this explanation, his plans could be quite successful indeed. He was sure he could plan for every eventuality.



He just had to keep clergy away from her, as she was Cheonchong, Heaven Favoured. While all kings may have ruled with the mandate from Heavens, she was, indeed, considered a very remarkable, person truly Beloved by all the Gods.



While Youngjae doubted it reached beyond the official title, he had yet to meet the priest or priestess that didn't believe in this to the very letter.



She didn't know. Should she ever realize how much influence she could muster from a position entirely unrelated to her noble lineage…



Youngjae reflections were suddenly interrupted by a person who emerged from the roadside forest just before him and his troops…



He barely managed to pull the reins on his horse yelling, "Halt!"



Before he managed to shout any order, a lone man dressed in black, flowing robes was engulfed by a blast of flame coming from the treeline.



Youngjae barely managed to maintain control of his horse, while a few cavalrymen behind him were even thrown out of their saddle.



He took a glimpse of the man in black using his sword to redirect the blast away for him in an impressive display of abilities beyond the common fighters.



The Sword Disciple, the full Adept even, shoot through Youngjae's mind.



What followed was, however, much more shocking than the extraordinary abilities of the Sword Disciples, as a few strange creatures he had never seen in his life attacked the mysterious swordsman.



One came with the flames, and the other two emerged from the shifting air.



It happened so quickly.



Both unnatural beasts fell to the stranger, their bodies turning into red mist dissolving into the thin air like ashes in the wind.



Only the lone, black swordman remained - slashed, badly burned, bleeding profusely from the several slashing wounds, he stepped forward screaming something Viceroy couldn't understand - the language of Jin.



Only now did Viceroy's men react.



Wounded Sword Disciple fell to the arrow.



"Ambush! Ambush!" soldiers yelled, preparing for the attack.



"Formation! Shields!" was the only order Viceroy was able to give, and his men tried to follow. While his cavalrymen didn't handle the surprise well, a few losing their horses, his foot soldiers performed admirably trying to prepare against the possible attack.



In the moment of confusion, Gam Youngjae looked around, trying to get an understanding of the situation, to find the enemy to defend against.



He expected the rain of arrows, the soldiers charging from the woods - as much as Youngjae despited the more martially inclined fools, he still knew about the war - but no further attack came.



"Order!"



He tried to keep his horse still and held his hand up to signal the nervous troops to wait for further orders. He did let the captains do the shouting.



For an endless few minutes, he waited, but nothing moved. The forest was silent.



The lone black swordsmean lay on the road in the puddle of blood, unmoving. He was not going to give answers.



Glancing in the other direction, he could even see the outlines of his fortress in the distance, and the darkening skies above. With no ambush forthcoming, they could make it to the safety of his fortified residence before the sunset.



He couldn't however stop himself from thinking about the creatures he didn't see before - coming from anywhere, disappearing into nowhere, like the evil spirits of legends - they were something that seriously challenged his self-control. He could be looking for the Sage later. Not exorcism though, not if he could help it, priests together with the Crown Princess Cheonchong would be a troublesome combination.



Viceroy looked at the royal lady and even though he was close to saying something he would regret, he reined his temperament immediately as had done so many times before in the Royal Court. While he couldn't deal with spirits, he could deal with men and women.



Hae Narim not only managed to keep control of her horse while keeping her composition almost perfectly, but she also grew pale.



"They did follow me there," she said.



Viceroy Gam Youngjae could already tell he hated his situation even more.
 
Chapter 10: As Night Falls
The more frantic my monsters were - or perhaps more enthusiastic, it was hard to tell with them - the more pressed I felt to somehow contribute to their efforts.



I just didn't know how.



Outside, with the sound of rustling leaves followed by the loud, earth-shaking thud, another tree fell down. It made me flinch in surprise. I seemed to be the only person who didn't expect this as I heard the tireless menagerie of monsters laughing in their high-pitched voices, satisfied with her work, whatever that was.



My current company in the form of Tama, Miwah and Narita were also completely calm, and likely confused about my own reaction instead. They gave me questioning looks.



"Master?"



"What are you doing out there?" I asked, looking in the direction of the window. Since it used fabric in place of glass, there was nothing visible though, just the vague play of light and shadows. I didn't know what they were doing, or why. Also, I couldn't comprehend how they could work so fast. Cutting trees without modern tools was a tedious process. It wasn't hard to assume their powers were behind that though.



"Clearing perimeter. Making traps," Tama answered calmly.



"Perimeter? Traps?" I was confused.



"Fewer spaces humans can use as a cover, the better. They got too close last time. Also, if they can dodge my fireballs, let's give them spike pits to contend with as well," Tama explained with a grin on her vulpine face.



They were finding distressingly new ways how to maim others.



"We will keep you safe, Master," Miwah growled affectionately as she, once again, hugged me from behind. Perhaps they sensed I was upset, and they just couldn't say why.



Although their strangely devoted behaviour felt a little creepy, I wasn't entirely sure how to react to them at all. I didn't know if I should feel scared. Or perhaps if I should welcome their advances as a matter of assurance they wouldn't leave me in the wilderness.



But there was also another matter - they were getting smarter by the minute and were very quick in making up new, inventive ways to kill people. It was concerning in its own right, especially when I needed their protection to even stay alive. I was at their mercy in that regard.



"Please be careful going into the forest, Master," Narita added, "there might be still human-things lurking. We need to keep you safe."



I decided to not comment on the term to describe humans even if it troubled me, it was hardly a new development.



"Ah," I said and spent a short moment thinking. It was relatively hard to do when a werewolf used me as a hug pillow. Tama tilted her head to the side, considering me. Narita was also quite patient with me, her mousy ears twitching.



"Did anyone check all that stuff in here?" I offered. Despite the fact the frustration I felt when the haphazard stash didn't provide the immediate answer I was hoping for, I couldn't rule out it could be indeed useful in some way.



Even if it wasn't for him, it would be for the monsters.



I assumed that sorting out the collection of items left behind by the previous occupants of this camp and determining their value, or overall usefulness, would come in handy. I could leave the rest to the tireless horde.



"Aside from finding the dress here, not in any great detail. Are you looking for anything in particular?" Tama answered with a nod, looking around.



"And the armour I wore," Miwah offered, still clinging to me. Though she didn't wear said armour anymore - the assassin's blade had gone right through it in that fight, and the canine monster was still around only because death was a relatively temporary setback to them, rather than the final destination.



Although I presumed not all fighters we could meet around there were on that level, the monsters would have much greater difficulty fighting them off without outnumbering them greatly.



The idea of another battle, another slaughter, still made me shudder.



Pressing my mind to something productive, I determined that any weapons and armour stored there had to go.



It was the memory of the creatures dying that guided my decision, strangely enough. I didn't want that to happen. It was painful to watch even if with their tendency to come back to life. Giving them some protection would help. Giving them weapons didn't make things worse.



After a brief look around, I picked one of the scale mail armour jackets still left around among the other disarranged goods, it was large and actually, quite heavy to even lift, probably sturdier than average, or just made for the bulky individual. It was even heavier than the one they put on me previously, wasn't sure where it even ended.



With shaking hands struggling with the weight, I offered it to Miwah. The werewolf still picked it up with ease, even though she wasn't keen on wearing it at the moment.



"Here,"



"Tired looking at my body?" She offered in a playful way, exactly as Tama did before. I hoped it wouldn't be a general tendency for them in the future.



"I prefer not to see you harmed," I answered, truthfully, better not to think of anything else.



"There is no need to worry about that as long as you stay safe, Master." She purred softly.



"Seeing you die hurts me as well." I objected, and with a brief moment of silence added, I added: "Please."



"If it makes you happy, Master," Miwah spoke, approaching me a little bit.



I was uncertain if I should welcome another display of tenderness from the werewolf. It was always awkward, especially when I realized how contradicting my own feelings on it were. On the one hand, I should be terrified of them, on the other, it was safer with them…



Not willing to decide on my dilemma, I pushed the conversation elsewhere.



"Oh, I know, it would be nasty to wear, perhaps the clothing that goes under it?" I wondered, looking through the mess of the stash, there was certainly cloth, though not all of it was meant to be actual garments, though it could help.



"Master, I think you didn't say if you like the dress," Tama interjected. I better not question from where everything came.



"Oh, it suits you," was my polite, and not really thought-through answer, which visibly pleased the fiery vixen.



"But since there are no humans around…" she teased, in a seductive tone. Perhaps Tama sensed my own uneasiness and decided to toy with me a little. I opted to say silent.



I went to look for another item from the loot pile. Anything that provided some degree of protection was probably wise to use while we could.



There just weren't that many things available to choose from, there was that same scale-mail styled suit, as I saw before, and another of those mostly leather cuirasses, a lot of cloth, but that was just about it.



There was no way I would equip all of them, not after their numbers rose so quickly. There was a handful of equipment only, most likely only what the previous owner considered pricy.



"I am sure more humans around there had some armour," I said as I struggled to outfit Narita into something more protective. As she was the smallest, most petite of us, it was difficult to fit her into something bulky. It was probably useful to keep her, along with her smaller kin protected considering they could heal others. Though I recalled that many of the men that we fought didn't have complete suits, just shoddy leather breastplates.



My thoughts were interrupted by the red mist, materializing and spitting a few 'Purifiers' into the world. One, two - up to four fox-like creatures were brought in. It made me immediately stress out about another raid.



"Master!" They announced themselves with the typical cheerfulness, not with distress, but it didn't make me feel any better. They immediately stepped toward me, in their happy-to-see-me fashion.



"Another ambush?" I immediately expected the worst.



"Master!" The small fiery vulpines shook their heads, and Tama, the largest and only one actually speaking in full sentences helpfully explained: "No. We should be safe, for now."



I recalled that there were a few on the timer. It was hard to keep track of things like this in life-threatening situations.



It didn't calm me down much, though I did make my best to compose myself, and patted one of the monsters on her head, then another, as I assumed they actually expected to be welcomed back among the living, or something along those lines. They loved the attention and probably considered their own clingy manners as standard.



I took a deep breath and sighed, not out of true annoyance, but more in the way to give myself a little bit of confidence in this matter. I very much doubted my role in commanding them, but I had to try as my life depended on it.



"Thank you," I said after a short pause, and to direct them, or perhaps myself, from my own unease I suggested: "Did you recover any of the armours humans wore? Some that weren't burned, or damaged otherwise..."



"Yes, Master," Tama answered.



"You four…" I said to the smaller ones, "You help me to sort those things…"



"Master!" They screeched in agreement.



"So, first give the leftover armours to…" I paused, briefly mentally struggling with how the system tended to code things, "...to Defilers. They can heal you if you are wounded. Then to anyone else, if anything is left."



They confirmed with their usual phrase, and I picked the polearm propped against the wall in the corner, handing it over to the first of the monsters close by.



Then the curved sword lay on the pile of assorted junk, an assortment of other exotic weapons, and another outfit, like a few pieces of clothing.



Even my 'assistants' were bored about what was left, though they dutifully remained around, reminding me I needed to find a way to reward them. I didn't know why. They obviously didn't desire many items, though they did like to have a curiosity that contributed to their developing personalities.



I was more than happy to give away all the trinkets if they made them happy.



The few rolls of textile were next to useless, just as the pieces of fragmented artwork were, despite being made of precious metals, or even coins. They would require a knowledge of the language and where to trade in the first place. A few jugs that probably contained alcohol were equally uninteresting.



I used to hear about the gold fever, but I experienced no such thing. Only sadness.



Disappointed, and exhausted, and with the shadows creeping into the house I was in, I knew it was getting late. I gave Tama a glance as she still toying with some artwork for her amusement, then threw the golden piece away as useless junk. I couldn't help but agree with the sentiment.



Instead, I went to check what the monsters outside were doing as the commotion was hard to miss through the thin walls and fabric-covered windows. They made a ruckus for about a few hours, I was certain, at least one noisy thud where other trunks hit the ground. It was all hard to miss, along with the persistent smell of burning wood. I couldn't overlook it anymore.



They still managed to shock me.



When I stepped outside and I looked around, I realized things had changed a little.



Originally, the paved courtyard was surrounded on all sides by the greenery slowly encroaching on the shrine and its support structures, now it was surrounded by a ring of burnt, dead vegetation and fallen trees. It may be only a few meters wide as it was now, but still a very noticeable change.



If I had more monsters, especially the life-draining ones, they would turn this entire area into a dead wasteland. Monsters were still active out in the forest, seemingly with boundless energy, suppose to set up traps Tama spoke about before.



I noticed a few who tried to strip the downed tree with the found or gifted blades. I didn't know anything about swords, but I know you couldn't use them chopping wood, weapons would break, or be otherwise ruined.



But I didn't care.



I didn't even have the strength to scold them.



Instead, the sight of darkening skies and the smell of roasted meat drove my focus away from the devastation, or strange behaviour. Reminded of the fact I hadn't eaten anything for the day, my stomach rumbled in protest.



"Hey! Everyone! It was enough work for today, you should rest." I shouted to no one in particular. I was soon answered with a chorus of voices screeching the usual "Master!" in an acknowledging tone, and the crowd gathered around the campsite when I sat by the fire.



"Thank you! Thank you!" I expressed my appreciation for their efforts as I gave a few hugs and pats to the creatures vying for attention, but for the most part, Narita, Miwah and Tama hushed away their smaller kin to give me some space.



When they offered me a generous serving of slightly burnt meat and overcooked rice in the bowl I was very grateful for it. I was too hungry to even mind it was mostly tasteless. If this world was something like the Earth in ancient times, spices were a luxury, after all, and with all hostility of the unknown all around us, it was good there was any food at all.



I devoured the food without any table manners as no one was really bothered about them, as the monsters around me didn't have any either. Some of the monsters ate the meat raw even, but the fact they needed to eat did remind me that they did need to be fed, like any living beings, perhaps except those still giddy from the power of so-called 'Defilers'.



It also reminded me how many of them were around right now, and how bustlingly overcrowded this place was. Rather than the small retinue, they were a huge mob, and though the smaller versions didn't really speak, they were still incredibly noisy and restless, amusing themselves with various silliness around the now several smaller fires. Not surprising, half of their current numbers consisted of pyromaniacs.



My thoughts on the matter were suddenly interrupted when the reddish clouds that usually accompanied the new monsters forming spat out the two 'Eviscerator' and one 'Purifier' which immediately yelped out their usual chant. It, of course, shocked me. Not only I wasn't expecting it to happen, but I was also almost certain that they indeed replenished their numbers by now, with no more surprises forthcoming.



"What now?" I barked out and jumped out off my feet, expecting an assault.



None did come.



"I don't think we are in danger, Master." Tama tried to reassure me, while Miwah added: "The last human that fled, he got far, but we finally got him. He won't survive, but we might have found where humans are."



"Where?" I asked, more startled than curious.



"Roughly, four hours in this direction, the forest ends. Humans have settlements even farther away." The werewolf gestured somewhere towards the horizon.



It didn't feel like a remote place,and for the moment I stomped around nervously before I once again dropped to my sitting place near the fire, my tired mind failing in finding any solution. If they knew where we were, we might not have days.



"They do have more armed men there," Miwah summarised, which made me worry even more, almost certain we would once again get into yet another battle. It made me almost shake, not only I didn't want to lead the army, I didn't want to fight one either.



"How many?" I requested, carefully, hoping for the best.



"A lot, Master."



I didn't like the answer.



"Are we going to be attacked? Are they heading here?" I shoot out a few more questions, trying to be calm and failing in that regard.



"Day is almost over," Tama suggested, "Humans don't see well in dark. If they set out in our direction, they won't do it until morning."



I looked up. Skies were getting dark, and though I had no idea when the sun would set I didn't think it would take far too long. I wasn't interested in the outdoors, but I knew that nights outside the cities with modern lighting were very dark, making travel through the forest straight away impossible.



Knowing as much still didn't calm me.



I sat down once again.



"We will always protect you, Master," Werewolf, once again, assured me with a soft, purring tone.



This time, I gladly accepted the reassurance, along with the closeness, though it didn't stop my tired mind from racing to find the solutions I didn't see.



If danger was real, perhaps I should start naming the rat-like monsters to boost their numbers…
 
Read all this in three or so hours, and will follow it on RR (next week), but let me say this:

Guy gets summoned to another world, accidentally summons a Pyro Anthro-Fox, said fox proceeds to commit unspeakable violence upon the (invasive) natives with the help of mini-mes', Guy runs away only to summon a Sexy Werewolf Dom, said SWD proceeds to also commit unspeakable violence upon the (local) natives with her mini-mes', runs to a local temple, commits accidental mass-murder, frees captives, summons mouse girls superior sister: Rat Healer and her mini versions, before deciding that developing Stockholm Syndrome and PTSD is vastly superior to engaging in flirting back with his summoned Fox and Werewolf yanderes.

Absolute Giga-Chad Energy, right there!

But so help me God, he better roll the Vixen and Werewolf into sushi and dick 'em down good 'n hard, or I'll continue reading until he does!
 
Guy gets summoned to another world, accidentally summons a Pyro Anthro-Fox, said fox proceeds to commit unspeakable violence upon the (invasive) natives with the help of mini-mes', Guy runs away only to summon a Sexy Werewolf Dom, said SWD proceeds to also commit unspeakable violence upon the (local) natives with her mini-mes', runs to a local temple, commits accidental mass-murder, frees captives, summons mouse girls superior sister: Rat Healer and her mini versions, before deciding that developing Stockholm Syndrome and PTSD is vastly superior to engaging in flirting back with his summoned Fox and Werewolf yanderes.
And do all of this in a few hours of in-universe time.

It is in wonderful tradition of the isekai protagonist to commit accidental murder and occasional warcrime.
 
And do all of this in a few hours of in-universe time.

It is in wonderful tradition of the isekai protagonist to commit accidental murder and occasional warcrime.
Thankfully, it seems he has acquired an army of maniac kiddos and their psycho moms to do it for him! Automatically even!

Now that is what I call an Insekai Protag!
 
Chapter 11: The New Dawn
I couldn't bring myself to do it, to give out new names that would trigger a vicious process of spawning new monsters.



I was certain it may happen anyway. Fuelled by the conflict the numbers would once again spiral out of control as it happened several times in the past. I hoped I would at very least forestall the circle of destruction until the very last moment when the dire circumstances would demand it.



I wanted to at very least forestall the conflict if not difficult choices, though I wasn't sure it was a good idea in itself.



Nothing felt like a good idea when I put a little thought into it. I wasn't ready for what might happen, and I doubted no ordinary person would ever be prepared to be stranded in what could as well be another world.



The sunset reminded me I had been there for almost a full day without any lead on how to return, which made my mood even more depressed. My thoughts had become even more scattered, making me question whether I would have any real chance to return home and whether I would be able to do in any timescale that mattered.



How long would it take before I would be considered a missing person? How long would it take until I would be presumed dead? Would I have a life to return to afterwards?



Submerged in thought, I didn't pay attention to anything happening around me even as monsters made a ruckus to amuse themselves, seemingly unconcerned by anything.



I kept spacing out even as the surrounding forest quickly drowned in dim light, illuminated only by the flickering light of the campfire, and the soft, almost non-existent reflection of the moonlight from the silvery moon hanging above in the sky.



The forest was filled with a cacophony of sound. The chittering of insects mixed with the rustling of leaves of small animals creeping through the underbrush in the shade of skeletal trees.



Worries about life elsewhere were replaced by worries about life now. Every sound put me on edge.



In a way, I welcomed the presence of monsters. Though alert, they weren't afraid, and they didn't seem significantly impaired by the dim illumination either. If anything, they were slightly more lively, though Miwah and Tama remained very close to me while their restless, smaller kin looked for trouble.



Little foxy pyromaniacs especially loved the fire, and poked the small pyre, visibly relaxing at the sight of dancing flames.



I could see their eyes gleaming in the dark, reflecting the campfire's flames and their anticipation as they traced the movement of the wildlife foolish enough to wander close.



Many times I jostled at the strange noises coming from the night, croaking birds, even a howling of what I assumed to be a wolf.



More unnatural distractions, a few blasts of fire flashing among the trees, giggling of 'Purifier' girlish voices, whispering of the animals, and then, silence aside of the twittering of insects.



Many times I twitched at the noise I may have imagined, expecting an attack that didn't come in the end, jumpy and nervous.



I finally fell asleep in my seating position near the fire, on the pile of bedrolls they prepared for me as the special, honorary post.



Then the nightmares came.



The flashbacks of all that violence came back in my dreams, splattered blood, twisting images licked by flames, pictures of suffering with accusing voices and anguished faces…



I woke up in the middle of the night, with a frightened shriek. My heart raced almost as if it was going to erupt from my chest.



My return to the waking world was welcomed by the embrace of the soft fur, equally pleasant and warm as it was unexpected, soothing me back into my dreams with a certain sense of weird safety, lulling me back to rest.



When I woke up the next day to the commotion of the camp's daily activity, I found myself laid still in Miwah's firm embrace which brought me some sense of embarrassment and made me struggle to get free of it.



They were creepily affectionate before, I couldn't claim it surprised me, though I still felt a certain amount of uneasiness when I realized I spent the night snuggling into the large werewolf. Even if Miwah had feminine curves, and her pelt was pleasantly soft to the touch, she was still a big, monstrous anthropomorphic animal which could tear a man apart barehanded. I still felt comfortable being close to her, or my other monsters, even if I should not, by logic, and experience. So far I experienced more severe threats from the local humans than I did from the monstrous menaces the bizarre system kept spawning. This strange, internal contradiction confused me to no end.



At least Tama decided not to hold me down this time, the fiery vixen instead merely sat very close to us, her clawed hand laid on me in an assuring gesture.



She wasn't the only one within arm's reach either.



Looking quickly around, there were several lazing around in the very close vicinity, on or at the edge of that pile of bedrolls that was made by improvised seating, like a fluffy ball of bodies, tails, fuzzy ears, and claws. I would have to crawl over them, though they probably wouldn't mind.



Of course, with the numbers they had, most of them were up, already fully engaged in their daily frantic struggle to make this camp liveable, or at least shape it to their image. Or perhaps convince the woods themselves that they were the dominant predators around now, as I took a glimpse they once again brought some catch for the morning snacks in form of unfortunate birds or rabbits.



I also took a glimpse of Narita, dressed in the salvaged breastplate and cloth, bossing around the other, common versions of monsters of all three kinds. She wielded the polearm we took from the stash as it was some staff of office, and pointed with it the pieces of greenery they wanted to remove.



At this time, only a few monsters opted for the nap, and those who did decide to do it near me, almost like it was some privileged position. Perhaps a dozen or so. Close to me, or close to the fire, which was still burning, dutifully kept through the night.



"Good morning, Master." She, and Miwah, welcomed me to the new day.



"Good morning," I answered hesitantly, sounding uncertain even to my own ears.



It stirred the other resting monsters which added their screechy greetings summarized to the only word: "Master!"



I immediately freed myself from their entanglement, partly due to the persisting confusion on how I should even approach the interaction with the furry menagerie and party due to the fact that the pressure in my bowels forced me to search for some secluded spot to find-a-friendly-bush as toilets were unlikely a thing in such a place and such era. I hated it.



The monsters seeing me rise immediately got up, to follow me as some entourage to the important person.



"I would need some privacy, please…" I said immediately when I realized they would most likely follow me everywhere.



Luckily, they did understand and let me hide in the bushes to relieve myself, dealing with yet another problem I was unused to dealing with, silently bemoaning the absence of modern conveniences and swearing that I must find a way to get out of this forsaken place. The absence of the comfort that people in most developed counties took for granted was hard to get used to. I had to think of something better than leaves replacing the toilet paper, perhaps the fabric I couldn't sew into anything.



Or get home. Get home as soon as possible, preferably.



Emerging from the brushes I ran into, quite literally, a couple of my monsters, both the wolf and fox variants, immediately grabbing me and pulling me aside, and onto the forest floor without much explanation.



"Master!" They screeched, their usual, high-pitched girlish voices alarmed, and upset by something I couldn't quite discern.



"Master!" One of them, the vulpine version set apart from others with a looted lamellar armour, and the helmet, pointed towards something.



I was about to object, yell even, as I was scrambling back on my feet - words however quickly froze on my tongue as I realized I almost fell into the spiked pit trap. Tama wasn't joking when she said they made one of these. Even if this one wasn't covered, it would be possible for me to stumble and fall in, getting myself impaled on the sharpened sticks in there.



"Thank you," I said, appreciating the warning, though struggling to control outbursts about being put in possibly deadly danger.



Something within me boiled, though I felt more at odds with the circumstances which lead to this, rather than this particular flavour danger itself. If I wasn't whisked away to this land with hostile natives, there wouldn't be a need for any of this.



"Master!" They answered, proudly.



With the smaller monsters in tow, I returned back to the camp without stumbling into any more spiky surprises prepared for assassins that may sneak up on us. Or something I could wander into, in my own ignorance.



"Narita?" I approached first of the more talkative of my followers in sight. I still struggled to think of them as such, I didn't feel competent to give orders.



"We might need toilets," I said straight away, "I almost fell into one of those spike traps when I … I…"



I stopped, realizing it was quite awkward conversation to have.



"Yes-yes, Master. I understand." She nodded, enthusiastically and seemingly in understanding, though with a strange speech pattern: "Very unpleasant place for Master. There is a latrine still, very unpleasant, behind the buildings, but away from traps. Maybe we can find a chamberpot!"



She pointed out one of the most decrepit of the buildings I didn't really step into before.



"Oh," I said, wishing I knew sooner, though I imagined it couldn't be better than the woods themselves, considering the ancient era this world seems to resemble, at least to my eyes.



I wasn't particularly enthusiastic, or even agreeable, about this, but I didn't have any choice, though I wasn't given time to dwell on this as both Tama and Miwah came around.



"Master?" They said, sounding worried, "You should be more careful around the forest. It's too dangerous to go alone, and unguided. You may get hurt!"



Tama pulled me into a hug, much to the amusement of the lesser kin who wanted to do the same.



I wanted to object that it was unsafe because they made it so with the random pitfalls dug out in the forest, but I mostly kept my temper in check, as I begrudgingly accepted I was in need of their help. I was in desperate need of friends.



"I apologise for putting you in danger. I am sorry, Master! I am sorry!" The fiery vixen sounded uncharacteristically apologetic.



"If you make traps make sure we don't wander into them ourselves." I offered. It was common sense, though to fight the assassins with the army of anthropomorphic creatures wasn't exactly an ordinary situation by any means.



"I don't want you to die in the trap you made either!" I added.



"Yes, Master." She said. "We will keep you safe!"



"Did you manage to scout the area?" I asked, "Do we know where we are?"



"Yes, Master." Miwah took her turn to answer, "We are mostly isolated in the woodland."



I didn't feel that word 'isolated' described it, but for the first time, I was actually trying to form a plan I didn't have yet.



"Where was ninja the last time you encountered him," I asked, then realized that I probably didn't use the appropriate term for those superhumanly skilled swordmen.



"Four hours in this direction, Master." The werewolf pointed out, though I was almost certain it wasn't the way the road went, "Much more armed humans there."



Strangely enough, the term didn't confuse anyone, making me briefly wonder why they knew things they did, but the sense of more pressing matters made me put this particular mystery aside for the time being.



"Fields past the forest in this way, Master." I nodded, "It was the way the road actually headed to, wasn't it?"



"Road splits further downhill thus more human dwelling must be around." She described it, gesturing in a different direction which made me guess we are on the hill, covered by the forest, and perhaps in between the villages where humans live.



Which was a stretch, I didn't know that, though I clearly recalled the sight of the valley of sorts when we came down from that place in the mountains where I woke up in this accursed world.



"We can scout more…" Miwah suggested interrupting my silence.



"Did you look uphill where I appeared, for something can send us home?" I did recall asking for someone to be sent there while strongly uncomfortable with giving orders.



"Dead bodies are still there." She said, "Other than that, we don't know what we are looking for..."



I wasn't particularly keen to see what happens to the cadaver after a day laying in the forest, but up there, among the stone ruins, must be the solution of how to end this nightmare, perhaps one that doesn't require interacting with the uncommunicative locals.



Putting distance between us, and possibly punitive force, was also an option, especially if I wanted to avoid the fight.



"Let's try to go back and check. It isn't far away."
 
Poor MC really needs to get communication going with someone. If he's not careful, it will soon be a case of "Every faction agrees - this guy needs to die first."

Admittedly, there are a few minor problems. Like his fluff-minions hate humans on sight and especially sound and vice versa. But humans have quite happily sold their souls to demons for benefit before; there must be someone willing to be untrustworthy allies against the rest of the world. :p
 
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