I look out over the city of Reitzland, twinkling in the setting sun, and then turn toward the gathering of upset people breaking off into small groups. The two paths laid out before me couldn't have been any clearer.
Down one, I would sneak into the city and complete my first step toward becoming a [Hero]. Down the other, I would camp outside and use my soon-to-be [Hero] skills to ward off whatever evil stalked the night.
It was the very first day since I'd abandoned being a villain, and yet I was paralyzed. Not physically, of course. Even with my [Calamity] powers sealed inside myself, I was still a masterwork of shaped Wyrd rather than flesh and blood. But rather by the dilemma before me.
One choice would further my quest to become a [Hero], while the other encompassed the acts that a [Hero] would perform.
How was I supposed to choose between the two?
I turned to look at Markus, hoping my furry friend would have some advice, but his head was drooped down against my neck, and his body was twitching with little furry-critter dreams.
I sigh, disappointed that I wouldn't have his counsel on this dilemma but let him continue sleeping. He'd had a long day.
Besides, I couldn't keep turning to him for advice. If I did that, he might end up becoming a [Hero] as well—or worse, instead of me. And I didn't want to be the sidekick who killed the [Hero] and stole their powers. I'd read enough to know that would lead me right back to being a villain.
Still, letting Markus nap left me no closer to resolving my issues. In fact, it left me even worse off because as I weighed my options, a horrifying realization was starting to bubble in the back of my mind: I may have a lack of suitably refined heroic instincts. And while I was sure my many future deeds would resolve that particular issue quite nicely, it did little to help me now.
And so, despite my genius, I was stuck in this morass of indecision and-
My genius mind shatters in fractal patterns as it plays out a thousand scenarios and then reforms.
I smile. Of course. It was so simple. If my nascent heroic instincts were too new to rely upon, I could instead call upon my villainous ones—instincts which I knew had been honed to an impeccable fineness over the last fifteen years—and then simply do the opposite.
My relief at that realization—and the reliability of my genius—was palpable. Because when I viewed my problem through that lens, the answer was clear.
I would stay outside and protect these poor, helpless people from the terrors that no doubt were even now stalking the late afternoon. And I would do that in the time-honored tradition of [Heroes] everywhere.
I would patrol the camp.
"Are you okay, sweetheart?"
An elderly voice interrupts me from my meticulous inspection of the camp perimeter that marked the edge between the flickering of campfires and the evils lurking in the darkness beyond.
I turn to what was clearly an old, married couple gathered around a campfire. The old woman was looking at me while stirring a pot hanging over the fire and the old man was carving a stick with a wide-bladed knife.
I salute her like one knight had saluted me earlier, mostly because I thought it had looked neat when he'd done it.
"I'm fine, miss. I'm just patrolling the perimeter."
"Oh my, aren't you just adorable? What's your name, dear? And are you sure your parents are okay with you wandering about camp like this?"
I pause before instinctively responding that I wasn't born; I was hatched from a chrysalis of Wyrd, and anyway, my sisters and I had long since devoured the one who had created us. And decide instead to use my new-found skill of telling half-truths.
"My name is Ciel. I'm all by myself. My…" I pause to decide whether my creator counted as a father. On the one hand, he'd never really done much for us besides scream in agony as we dismembered him. On the other hand, he had kind of birthed us, so that was probably close enough. "He's dead."
"What? You're out here all by yourself. You poor brave thing. I'm Marta, and this is my husband, Henrick." The elderly woman turns toward her husband, who has set aside his knife in favor of staring into the coals of the campfire. "Henrick. Get the girl a bowl and a place to sit—and bring her something warm to wear while you're at it. The red scarf, dear. It's almost the exact same shade as her eyes."
I wasn't cold at all. I didn't think it was possible for my sisters or me to even feel cold. But instead of correcting the old woman, I decided to remain silent. After all, a new scarf would be lovely. And it would give Markus something soft to rest on.
"Marta…"
The old man's voice whines in a way that would have gotten him gutted in any number of villainous cabals I'd been a part of. Fortunately for him, I was a [Hero], so I generously let the grating tone go. Unfortunately for him, his wife was not so generous.
"Move, Henrick, or you'll be sharing a bag of oats with the mule for dinner tonight."
That threat works as well as any threat of evisceration I'd ever made. Better, in fact, than many because no sooner was it uttered than the whining old man was up and moving.
With a satisfied look, the older woman turns toward me and smiles. "Come join us for dinner, dear. It's the least we can do for a brave young lass out on her own."
I open my mouth to decline the offer—I could subsist off of ambient mana for months on end—only to be interrupted by the grumbling of my stomach.
A frown crosses my face at the unfamiliar sound before my perfect memory reminds me that I had sealed away that part of myself along with the rest of my [Calamity] skills.
"I-" What was that? Was I hungry?
"It's not a problem, dear. Just come and warm yourself by the fire. Henrick and I will take care of everything." She smiles conspiratorially as I slowly approach the fire. "Don't let my husband's gruff manner fool you. He's a softy at heart."
In my experience, every human was soft at heart—it was such a squishy organ—but I didn't think that's what the old woman meant. Still, I nodded as though I understood. "Thank you."
"No thanks needed, dear."
The old woman shakes her head, seeming just on the verge of saying something more. However, instead of voicing whatever thoughts I could see lurking in her eyes, she remained silent.
A moment later, she turns as her husband reappears from the gloom with a bright red piece of cloth draped over his left shoulder and a stack of wooden bowls and cutlery gripped loosely in the other. She bustles over toward the older man, plucks the length of cloth from his shoulder, and moves toward me with it gripped lightly in one hand while the old man sets the bowls down near the fire.
"Here. Feel this. We wove it with wool from the family goat. We had intended to give it to our-"
Thanks to my perfect eyesight, I see a faint glimmer of wetness around the old woman's eyes as she stops moving forward, her voice trailing into a whispered 'daughter.' A moment later, her husband reaches out, places a hand on her shoulder, and squeezes.
"Our daughter was about your age when s-she left to make a life for herself in the city." The old man clears his throat roughly against the hoarseness in his throat and continues. "We got word a month back that she'd been found dead and…"
The old man trails off again into silence and puts an arm around his wife. I watch the two of them embrace in silence, feeling uncomfortable in a way I couldn't put into words.
Fortunately, despite the feelings bubbling up in my stomach, my genius mind was undeterred in finding something to say.
"This is Markus. He's my friend." Said furry friend levels an annoyed look at me as I wake him from his nap atop my shoulder and hold him out to the older couple. "I found him in the forest."
"Oh." The old woman blinks away the wetness in her eyes and smiles. "And isn't he a handsome little man?"
I nodded in agreement. I hadn't just snatched the first furry creature I'd seen. A [Hero] had to have standards in her choice of companions. But before I could bring him closer to show off the glossy coat on his fur, Markus managed to squirm his way out of my hold and scamper back up my arm to his perch on my shoulder.
"He was the one with the fluffiest tail."
"You chose well, young lass. Red-tailed squirrels are a symbol of good luck around these parts."
I run a finger gently down the red stripe on Markus's tail and smile happily. Having a rare animal companion—and one that symbolized luck, no less—was a sure sign that I was on the right track with my quest to become a [Hero].
"Now there's a smile." The old woman's face brightens further, almost to what it was before the mention of her dead daughter. "Shall we have some dinner, my dears?"
"A pack of wild horses couldn't keep me away, love."
The old man responds first, and I have to resist an urge to frown. Unless he was much stronger than he looked—and unfortunately, with my [Dissection of the Root] sealed away, I couldn't see his level or skills—he wouldn't stand much of a chance against one horse, let alone a pack of them.
On the other hand, I knew villains got stronger as they got older, so perhaps it was the same for [Farmers].
Well, there was only one way to know for sure.
"Are you sure, mister? You don't look that strong."
The old woman blinks once and then explodes in cackling laughter that drowns out the sputtered response from the old man. At first, the old man scowls at his wife, but that doesn't last long before he, too, seems to get caught up in her laughter.
I watch, bewildered, as they lean against each other and laugh in a way that reminds me of a coven of [Banshees] I had once worked with. Eventually, the surprisingly loud and vibrant laughter dies down enough as the two of them try to regather their breath.
As the old people gather themselves, I find myself caught between two feelings. On the one hand, it was… not unpleasant watching them laugh. Yet, on the other, their laughter had left me no closer to knowing whether or not [Farmers] grew stronger with age.
"Oh, dear. I do believe I needed that. It's been a long few weeks. And I haven't seen my husband put in his place so neatly since Sera left."
The smile that accompanies her words is something I do recognize. It was the same one I wore when I missed my sisters and wondered what they were up to.
Wistful. That was the word.
"Do you like fish, dear?"
I nod my agreement. My favorite were the big ones that lived deep in the ocean. They were wonderfully juicy, and the way they crunched when my teeth snapped through their spine was simply delightful.
"Then you'll love my world-renowned Reitz Stew." The woman grins, doubtless smug over having created such a famous recipe. "I make it with leeks, watercress, a secret blend of herbs and spices, and a few generous chunks of river perch."
As she finishes the explanation, the old woman sweeps a trio of bowls into one arm and ladles out stew until the bowls are just shy of full to the brim. With similarly expert precision, she gracefully hands a bowl to me and then her husband before taking the third for herself.
Seeing my impressed look, she smirks. "I spent some time in the capital as a [Server] when I was a much younger lady. It's how I met my Henrick."
"She left a note on my plate with an address, and like a fool, I went, not sure whether I was going to be mugged or fu-."
"Henrick!"
I ignore the sharp, whispered conversation between the two in favor of scooping up the biggest piece of fish in my bowl with my wooden spoon.
I'd once worked for an overlord who had kidnapped Odril's sixth best [Chef] and [Soul Bound] him to servitude. It had been a real shame when a cross-city rival had assassinated him, but I'd learned a lot about food in my time there, so I knew I would be able to judge this world-famous stew accordingly.
I bring the steaming hot spoonful of fish to my mouth, pausing to blow on it twice—because I knew that's what I was supposed to do in my smaller form—and take a bite.
I roll the bite around in my mouth and chew slowly and deliberately. The fish was just as juicy as I'd expected, and the broth tasted like lemongrass and pepper and a faint floral freshness that I couldn't quite identify. I chew a few more times, letting the flavors meld on my tongue as I judge the taste before swallowing.
I let my spoon fall into the bowl and held out my free hand with a thumbs up, just like I had been taught. "This is really good. You could easily be the seventh best [Chef] in Odril with a recipe like this."
"There you go, love. A top-ten ranking in Odril. That's quite the achievement for your stew, isn't it?" The old man chuckles into his stew, only to let out a soft 'oof' as his wife digs her elbow sharply into his side.
"Thank you, dear." This time, the smile is one far more familiar to me. It had quite an impressive tinge of menace. "Would you like seconds?"
"Yes, please."
A hand shakes at my shoulder, and I twist deeper into my blankets with a mumbled 'grmfblrl,' fully intending to ignore whatever was trying to wake me up. As the hand shakes me a second time, I feel a moment of confusion as to why my aura hadn't already murdered whoever was bothering me before my immaculate memory reminds me that I had sealed it away along with the rest of my [Calamity] skills.
Before I can be shaken a third time, I yawn and stretch my arms above my head before opening my eyes to see the old woman smiling above me.
"Good morning, dear."
"Mrgrbl."
"The guards have cleared the crimson alert and decided to let folks enter early."
I rub the crust out of my eyes as sleep drains from my body and sit up so I can stretch my legs before the old woman's words filter into my brain.
"Really? Then there's no time to lose."
I jump upright and snag the scarf the old woman had given me last night. I wrap it around my neck with one hand and then sweep it around so that one end trails down my chest and the other down my back.
I look down into my makeshift bedding and snap my fingers. "C'mon, Markus. Wake up. We've got to go."
My furry companion twitches twice before rolling onto his stomach and running over to scramble up my leg and take his spot on my shoulder.
"Thanks for dinner, ma'am, but we've got to go," I call out over my shoulder as I rush to where a line of people is slowly assembling. I had to hurry. If I waited too long, I'd be stuck in line all day.
"Oh? You don't have to rush, dear. Henrick and I would be happy for your company."
There's something in her voice that tugs at something inside me. I bring a fist up to thump at my chest a few times until the feeling goes away.
I turn to the old woman and her husband and wave a hand over my head in a sweeping motion. "Thank you, but I have to go. I'm going to be a [Hero]."
Without waiting for a response, I start running toward the city. And my destiny.
My destiny ended up being stuck behind a large, red-haired man talking loudly to a dirty-looking man with a short bow strapped to his back and a pimply young man with what looked like the world's least impressive grimoire dangling from a chain about his waist.
They were an adventuring team. I knew that because of the bracelets wrapped around each of their wrists. Bronze, which marked them as E-Rank if I remembered correctly, and thanks to my immaculate memory, I knew that I did.
For a moment, I consider moving closer to better overhear the response to his practically bellowed questions. After all, gaining the wisdom of my soon-to-be seniors in the adventurer's guild seemed like a good idea. But when I spot a space opening up as an exhausted-looking group of farmers lagged a pace or two behind the slow shuffle of the line, another, far better idea occurs to me.
With the grace of a [Calamity] tip-toeing through the wilderness, I duck behind the large man and use his size to screen everyone's view as I dash for the spot that had opened up in front of the line.
I ignore a chorus of grumpy shouting as I plant myself in front of the [Guard] waving people into the city.
"Hi."
"Name, class, and reason for visit."
A bored stare framed by one of those metal helmets that only covered the top of someone's head meets my enthusiastic smile, and a rush of disappointment washes through me. It wasn't that I expected the [Guard] to know that he was welcoming a future [Hero] into the city. Nor was it because I apparently had to answer a quiz to enter the city. No, it was because my enthusiastic smile had never failed to elicit a response before.
Well, I frowned to myself. If he didn't like my smile, then he definitely didn't deserve to see it. Instead, he'd get the same stare I'd give a particularly incompetent lackey.
"Ciel. No class. I want to be an adventurer."
I tried my best to make my voice a flat monotone, utterly devoid of warmth or emotion, but even then, I could barely match the pure apathy and indifference to life that the guard had asked his questions with. My stare, however, was clearly the superior one. I knew that because the [Guard] instantly started to flinch and fidget in place.
And so, when his eyes fall from mine and drop to the ground, I graciously accept victory in our little contest and relax back into a smile—a far smaller one than I'd used earlier. He didn't deserve anything more.
"Thank you. I'm going in now."
I don't wait for the [Guard] to snap out of his stupor, and I completely ignore his voice shouting things like 'Come back' and 'I haven't given you clearance to enter' as I run happily into the city.
I was finally here, in Reitzland, The City of Adventurers, and the place where I would finally become a [Hero].
Half an hour later—I knew that much time had passed because I was counting the bells that rang from the city's clocktower—and after passing a fountain of a man with a crown riding on top of a giant fish for the third time, I realized that I didn't know where I was supposed to go.
It wasn't that I was lost. No. Never that. [Heroes] certainly never got lost. Neither, for that matter, did [Calamities]. So, I'd be the laughing stock of two worlds if I were lost, which I clearly wasn't. I was just enjoying the sights of the first non-rampaged city I'd ever been to.
The villains and overlords I usually worked with preferred abandoned castles and dank caverns—something about it being hard to assemble an army of occasionally cannibalistic soldiers in the middle of a city. And while I knew some overlords preferred cities, the city-dwelling types didn't tend to have the kind of jobs I enjoyed. Apparently, collateral damage was undesirable when you wanted to rule a city from the shadows rather than as an iron-fisted dictator.
Which was really a shame since I had a sneaking suspicion that city-dwelling villains were a bit more refined than the ones I had grown so tired of. Not that that mattered any more either way. I was here to be a [Hero], and that meant stopping any up-and-coming villains, not joining them.
And so, I turn my attention away from different kinds of villains and feel a thrill course through me as my eyes land on a vine-covered wall with a pair of balconies dotting the top floor of the building. I'd never stayed at an inn before—at least not one I hadn't rampaged through or on top of before—and I was looking forward to checking that off my list.
After looking my fill of the inn, I turn the other direction only for my eyes to light up again at the sight of a wooden plaque with a pair of swords crossed over a shield. I'd never been to a blacksmith, either, since my skin and claws were far, far stronger than steel, and my aura could shrug off everything but the strongest of [Relics]. But when I became an adventurer, I'd definitely need to shop here—though I'll probably wait until I find a party so I'd know what role I need to occupy.
I turn to look for yet another sight I'd only read about in my books, but that odd grumbly noise from my stomach stops me. Was I hungry again already? This was such a hassle. How did non-[Calamaties] deal with this?
I look at Markus and notice that his tiny, furry belly seems to be grumbling, just like mine. "We need to find something to eat, don't we?"
"Chirp."
I take that sound as a 'yes' and turn my perfectly honed senses toward finding something to eat. Expanding out my eyes and ears is easy enough, but one quickly aborted attempt to do the same with my nose is enough for me to pull back that sense and swear never to try that again.
Who knew cities could smell that bad?
Still, my ears had been enough to pick up the sound of someone shouting about 'Fresh baked buns,' once I recovered from gagging at the smell of a hundred unwashed latrines, I'd go find those buns.
I step up to the counter and smile up at a pudgy, balding man wearing a stained apron. "Hi. Markus and I are hungry. Can we have something to eat?"
Markus sits up from his lazy sprawl on my shoulder and places his paws together in front of him, and I turn my smile up as bright as it will go.
"Ya' got any money, kid?" The man stares down at me, nonplussed, as he wipes his hands back and forth along his apron.
"Nope." I shake my head. I'd never needed it as a [Calamity], and from my reading, money always seemed to rain down upon [Heroes] when they needed it, so I hadn't bothered taking any coins from the [Lord of Fallen Flame] when I'd left.
"Ya' don't look like an urchin kid, so why don't ya' get yer parents to buy ya' something?"
That was the second time someone had mentioned my parents in the last day or so. Were people really that concerned about my creator? Well, he must have been quite powerful to have been able to create my sisters and me. Not so strong that he'd been able to survive after he'd started trying to order us around, but still.
"He's dead."
The man stops wiping his hands against his apron and leans forward to stare at me. "Suppose that means yer ma's gone too?"
I'd never even considered the idea of a mother. Even after letting my mind shatter into fractal patterns and looking for something I could call a mother, I came up blank. Unless I counted the far depths of the Far Planes that my creator had stolen to create my sisters and me. But that was quite a stretch. The Wyrd could become many things, but I was almost certain a mother was not one of them.
"Never had one."
"Look, kid. I feel for ya', but I ain't running a charity here, so…" the man trails off as he leans even closer, "Bah. A roll or two's not gonna make a difference."
After saying that, he grabs a flakey-looking piece of bread that was stuffed, seemingly bursting with what looked like chocolate. Pain au chocolat if I remembered what that [Soul Bound Chef] had called them, and thanks to my impeccable memory, I certainly did. He then grabs a long stick of bread—a baguette, my infallible memory tells me—and wraps them in a thin piece of wax paper.
"Here, kid. I ain't gonna feed ya' every day, but if ya' come 'round near closing time, I might have a snack or two waiting for ya'."
"Thank you, mister." I accept the bounty with my brightest smile yet and immediately break off a piece of the chocolate bread for Markus.
"Yeah, yeah." The man looks away as he scratches the back of his head. "Stay out of trouble ya' hear me."
"I will," I promise as I start walking away. After all, I would be a [Hero], and [Heroes] never got into trouble.
After securing a meal for Markus and myself, I wandered back to the fish king statue and sat down upon the lip of it so we could eat. Apparently, we had both been quite hungry since we consumed the chocolate bread and the long bread stick in minutes.
As I lean back on my hands, careful not to let my scarf dip into the fountain water. I ponder what to do next. I knew I needed to find the adventurer's guild, but despite my best attempts, I had so far been roundly defeated by the maze of streets and intersections of Reitzland.
If only I could still use my larger form. Finding the guild would be easy then. I'd just have had to look for the building all the people trying to attack me were pouring out of.
That wasn't an option now, though. So, instead, I let my mind shatter into fractal patterns as it chases a thousand different ideas down to their conclusion.
When my mind reforms an instant later, I smile widely because I have not one but three potential plans laid out in front of me.
[] First, I could ask the shady [Information Broker] lurking in a nearby alley for directions. As a [Calamity], I was well-versed in getting valuable information from that kind of person.
[] Second, I could go into the rowdy bar I'd seen a few intersections back and ask someone there for directions. My stories all said that bars were the best place to find information.
[] Third, I could shout at the top of my lungs that I needed help. Whenever I had shown up to rampage, that kind of shouting had always drawn a lot of people trying to help.
[AN]
In my outline, Ciel was going to wander between campsites and meet several different groups that night. I blew through the word count I'd allotted for that first meeting almost immediately. I think it probably works better as one ~ 2.3k-word scene rather than as three ~ 800-word scenes, though.