Just when Vinny, weaponless and cursing his luck, was weighing whether he had to turn into Vanessa to break the stalemate, the black-robed assassin charging his flank with an alchemic bomb was bowled aside like a bowling pin.
Vinny thought for an instant that the soldiers patrolling around Camellaâs capital had finally arrivedâbut then reconsidered. Did ordinary city guards have destructive magic this potent?
He turnedâand froze.
Head bowed, wordless, Shicodale hid his eyes from view. Behind him, at some unknown moment, a gigantic Monstera Bloom had grown forth; its vines coiled up the black-robed men surrounding him and, like bowling balls, hurled them into their comrades.
The sudden turn shocked not only Vinny, but the assassins as well. Before striking, they had roughly assessed the two targetsâ threat levels. Obviously, Vinny ranked far above Shicodale; the timid silver-haired elf looked like he didnât even know how to hold a knife.
Of course, you canât judge by appearances alone. He was, after all, a student of Carillian Academy; without real ability, one doesnât cross Carillianâs threshold.
But once the fight began, watching Shicodaleâs meek refusal to hit back, the assassins only felt more certain the silver-haired elf was a pushover ripe for the picking.
Attempted assassinations on the outskirts of the capital carried extreme risk. Camellaâs capital had far more defensive strength and watchtowers than other cities; linger even a little and youâd be discovered.
Seeing that Vinnyâs Spirit Soul was like a turtle shellâpoisoned blades couldnât penetrate, toxins were uselessâand that he kept tracking the flanking comrades tossing incendiary potions, they traded looks and shifted tactics: take Shicodale hostage first to pin down Vinny, then finish him off.
They were just about to succeed when the âsoft persimmonâ suddenly bowed over the burned bundle of clothes, silent. The black-robed man at his side reached to seize himâthen felt his feet leave the ground. Dazed, he looked up and saw a towering, terrifying plant, higher than two men stacked atop each other, hoisting him into the airâthen smashing him away.
Other assassins hemming Shicodale in were snared by vines that burst from the earth. Barbs bit into their flesh; like roots sucking nourishment, the vines drank their life force at speed. The killersâ spirits sagged by the heartbeat. They understood that these dreadful plants were draining the vitality from their bodies.
If they didnât break free fast, theyâd be sucked dry into husks!
But most of these assassins held one-star or two-star Spirit Souls and were merely sorcerer-class, with scant magical offense. They couldnât even harm Vinny without alchemic elementals; naturally, they had little means to escape such thick, constricting vines.
In short order, they were shriveled into withered human husks, eyes bulgingâskin seemingly the only thing still wrapping what was left of their flesh.
Whatâ?
Realizing they had underestimated their targets, the assassins blanched. Vinny, for his part, stared, dumbstruck.
Was this Shicodaleâs magic?
It could only be his, right?
Vinny was honestly shaken. In his eyes, Shicodale had always been a harmless, ill-fated, fallen-nation elf princeâlike a timid little rabbit, startled even when a stranger approached.
With that personality, even with talent, once dropped into real combatâespecially kill-or-be-killedâhe ought to be frozen stiff with fear.
So Vinny had never expected Shicodale to help; heâd assumed heâd be dead weight, and that, stumbling into this mess, Vinny would have to carve a bloody path out on his own.
If it went badly and Shicodale fell into danger, Vinny would shoulder the huge risk of turning into Vanessa to save him.
This reversal was nowhere in Vinnyâs plans.
That kid Shicodale dared to killâand the magic he used, compared to his soft, gentle persona, was downright cruel. Completely outside Vinnyâs expectations.
Noâsomething felt off.
Vinny looked toward where Shicodale stood. The other kept his head lowered, hiding his face and eyes.
Having spent so long with him, Vinny felt this state was all wrongânothing like Shicodaleâs usual self.
What was going on? Was he too frightened?
Vinny didnât understand.
The few black-clad men by Shicodale who had escaped the initial binding reacted at last and swung their blades down at him.
Shicodale didnât dodge. He simply stood there. When the edges were a hairâs breadth away, several thick vines rose to block, thenâlike the othersâthe men were trussed up and sucked dry on the spot.
The cold efficiency of the kills made Vinny doubt whether this was Shicodaleâs doing at allâShicodale hadnât moved a single step since the start.
But it could only be him.
After those men were smashed back like trash, the remaining assassins flipped from hunters to prey; in a blink, the field was a rout.
They hadnât managed Vinny to begin with; theyâd relied on ambush and hostages. Now the hostage-to-be was goneâand had turned into a man-eating Monstera Bloom. Pounded by a duo, the situation collapsed.
One assassin, quick on the uptake, saw the magic was nature-aspected. He whipped out an incendiary potionâcounter-measures for the counterâand hurled it at the Monsteraâs tendrils.
Nature magic most often creates natural constructs; for all their power, the majority of such constructs cannot move from their origin points, and their greatest bane is fire-element magic.
The response was correct.
The Monsteraâs vines snapped at the vial in time, shattering the glass. The potion burst, flames roared, and fire ran across the Monstera. Its force dwindled fast.
But before the assassins could exhale in relief, Shicodale bent low, both palms touching earthâvines erupted again, racing toward them.
Several who failed to react in time were flung skyward by the sudden surge from below, thrown toward Shicodaleâs position.
Lacking wings, they couldnât control their fall; spikes of vine lanced up from the soil near Shicodale, impaling them in midair. They died before they hit the ground.
Blood sprayed everywhere, splattering the killing vinesâwhile the elf youth below remained unmoved, unheeding.
âWhat theââ Vinny gaped, a reflexive curse slipping out.
This silent, decisive killerâwas this really the same soft, adorable Shicodale he knew?
Heâd sometimes wondered how such a gentle thing had gotten into Carillian Academy on luck alone. Now it was clearâwithout real ability, who gets in?
Hadnât Vinny himself only made it in on a cheat? Without Vanessa, he mightâve already been done in by some stray mutt.
Stillâwhat exactly was happening to Shicodale right now?
Vinny frowned, expression turning odd.
As for the survivors, they were lucky mid- and low-tier nature magic doesnât usually reach far. They were just far enough from Shicodale; otherwise theyâd have shared their comradesâ fate.
They had no time to be grateful. Shicodale wasnât going to wait for them to close and fight fair.
Wind-tossed silver bangs veiled the elf youthâs face, but the assassins could sense, beneath that fringe, a pair of eyes cold and gleaming like a ravening beastâcharging straight at them.
Shicodale snapped his arm up. A thick vine burst from the ground, rising in sync with his motionâthen slammed down on a black-clad man.
Smack! One assassin was pulped. The others, agile as they were, fared little better.
It was only the beginning. The real storm was yet to come.
Shicodale kept swinging both arms; several vines moved in perfect unison, unleashing a downpour of blowsâa wild, battering rain.
Watching from outside the fray, as blood spattered in sheets, Vinny suddenly pictured somethingâyes: swatting flies.
It wasnât a perfect analogy, but those vines against those men really were like a fistful of flyswatters hammering a cloud of gnats. Get swatted, and you turned to paste.
It was a one-sided slaughter.
Encased in [Armor Fortress], Vinny gripped a knife heâd wrested from one of the men, jaw hanging as he stared.
So thatâs how Shicodale got into Carillian Academy.
Some people are protagonists for a reason.
By all rights, Shicodaleâs current rank should be about the same as his. And yet the magic he was castingâ
Vinny didnât know much about nature magic; among humans, few have high affinity for natural elements, and nature magic has long been synonymous with elves.
But even with his ignorance, anyone could tell: to summon vines and a Monstera that massive, Shicodaleâs compatibility with his Spirit Soul had to be extremely highâhis affinity with nature magic, too.
Heâd always thought Shicodale was a flower vase. Turns out he was a flower vaseâonly the flower in the vase was a Monstera that eats people.
Maybe Shicodaleâs combat power ranked near the bottom among the fated heroinesâbut that was in comparison with other heroines. Among ordinary people, even among Carillian Academyâs students, he was genius among geniuses.
Stillâwhat on earth was going on?
In a split second, Vinny had caught a look on Shicodaleâs face: a crazed hysteria, and the catharsis of vented rageâthe sort of expression that should never appear on someone like Shicodale.
Vinny hated to say it, but honestlyâthis Shicodale was... a little frightening.
The assassins had been pounded into quail. Nameless dead men though they were, seeing comrades youâd trained with turned to mince in under a second would make anyone quail.
Fear made their minds slip; reactions slowed; the vines caught upâand that was it. Dead on the spot.
Only when there was just one left did Vinny snap out of it. He shouted, âDaleâbrake! Wound the last oneâleave a tongue!â
But the elf standing there didnât seem to hear him at all. He gave no response, said not a word.
Smack! Vinny watched, eyes wide, as the last living assassin turned into mosaic like the rest.
âThis...â Vinnyâs voice died. He opened his mouth, but said nothing.
As suspectedâShicodaleâs current state was abnormal. In this state, if he stepped in, Shicodale might even hit him.
Forget it. Heâd wanted a live one to interrogate, but there was no keeping one now. The scum were all literally scum. So be it.
Onlyâit wasnât over.
Vinny had thought that once the assassins were handled, Shicodale would stop. Instead, he showed no sign of stopping, and kept smashing at what was already assassin confetti.
What are you doingâmaking paste?
By the end, the mud was streaked red and white. The scene was unbearable. Even Vinny, a capital-branded scoundrel, couldnât look; he averted his gaze.
What isnât he smashing to bits?
Vinny took a few steps back, face twisting at the stench.
This... was a lot.
Unsurprisingly, such a commotion drew the patrol soldiers near the capital. They, too, were stunned at the sight of several colossal vines threshing the ground. They were about to approach when Vinny shouted them down.
âStay back! Iâm a noble of the Kingdom of Camella. Iâll explain the situation in a momentâjust donât go over there right now!â Vinny feared that in Shicodaleâs current state, anyone who approached would be seen as âhostileâ and a âthreat,â and then who knew what would happen.
The soldiers hesitated when they recognized Vinny.
Only when their officer ordered them to hold position did they give up on advancing.
Maybe heâd hit enough. Maybe his magic had run dry. In any case, after a while, Shicodale finally seemed satisfied that the unsightly âpigmentsâ could not revive, and ceased channeling.
Thenâhe turned around.