Bear-san, Hears From Mia
âCan I ask you one thing before we get to the story?â (Yuna)
âWhat?â (Mia)
I asked what was bothering me.
âYou have sisters, right?â (Yuna)
âYeah, I have two cute little sisters.â (Mia)
âAnd you donât have parents, right?â (Yuna)
âTheyâre missing.â (Mia)
âThen your sistersâ¦â (Yuna)
It reminded me of myself back in my former world.
I remember my parents just playing around, rarely coming home, and always leaving me alone at home.
It allowed me to do most things on my own. But at the same time, I became a hikikomori gamer.
âAh, about that. My sisters are fine, Grandma is taking care of them.â (Mia)
I am relieved to hear that.
It seems that they wonât be lonely waiting for their sister, Mia, to come home.
I was worried about the food, but the situation seemed fine.
âBut weâre not that rich, and my parents are probably already dead somewhere. So I have to do my best for my sisters.â (Mia)
âMia-oneechan, arenât you lonely because you canât see your mom and dad?â (Fina)
Fina asked a bit thoughtfully.
Perhaps sheâs overlapping with her old self.
Fina didnât have a father either.
âThey havenât been around since I was little, so it was my grandma who raised me up. She is getting old, and I want to get rich and let her live comfortably.â (Mia)
I thought she was just a silly girl, but she was kind.
âSo I need money for that!â (Mia)
Mia raised her fist that was holding bread.
And when she lowered it, she started eating the bread.
âSo how did Carol end up with Mia?â (Yuna)
âCarol was kind enough to follow me.â (Mia)
âThatâs wrong. Mia-chan always protects me from the jerks. Thatâs why I want to help her in return.â (Carol)
âI just donât like bullies.â (mia)
No wonder Mia tried to protect Carol with just a knife.
âI understand your purpose now. But then, how did you find out about this place?â (Yuna)
âWell, when I was cleaning grandpaâs room, I found a note that said about this place.â (Mia)
âYour grandfather?â (Yuna)
âMy grandpa was a venturer, too.â (Mia)
âIn other words, youâre a family of venturers for generations.â (Yuna)
âThatâs right.â (Mia)
Mia said while proudly stretching her nearly flat chest.
âBut it seems youâre poor for that.â (Kagali)
âUu, thatâsâ¦â (Mia)
Mia bowed her head at Kagali-sanâs words.
âAnyway, when I was cleaning my grandpaâs room, who was a venturer, to see if there was anything I could sell, I found a note about this place.â (Mia)
âDo you have anything to sell?â (Yuna)
âI canât help it. Iâm poor. Maybe thereâs a treasure sleeping somewhere or something?â (Mia)
âJust to confirm, whereâs your grandfather now?â (Yuna)
âHe died a few years ago.â (Mia)
âIâm sorry to hear that.â (Yuna)
âDonât worry about it. Iâm not a child anymore.â (Mia)
Itâs a delicate topic for someone about the age of a high school student.
But I am independent and about the same age, so when people call me a child, it makes me feel uncomfortable.
âBut if there was a note that mentioned this place, isnât it possible that your grandfather already found the treasure?â (Yuna)
âThatâs definitely not the case.â (Mia)
Mia says emphatically.
âHow can you tell?â (Yuna)
âIf Grandpa had found the treasure, he wouldâve definitely bragged about it.â (Mia)
âMia-chan, your grandfather already said many times about the time he found the treasure.â (Carol)
Carol says nostalgically.
âGrandpa kept bragging about how he found the treasure. But since I never heard him talk about this place, Iâm convinced that grandpa definitely didnât get the treasure.â (Mia)
Itâs a persuasive explanation.
Sometimes some people repeatedly brag about their past glory whenever they meet someone.
Some of my relatives would tell me stories of their companyâs successes over and over every time we met.
Iâve heard it enough to have calluses on my ears.
âThen is it possible that someone else has taken it?â (Yuna)
âThereâs no way I, a novice venturer, would know that.â (Mia)
Then donât brag about it.
âBut Mia-oneechan, does that mean your grandpa didnât find it either?â (Fina)
Fina gets to the point.
âBut that moving guardian knight? Everyone calls it knight armor, right?â (Carol)
âWhichever is fine.â (Yuna)
âEtto, I think the fact that the knight armor is moving means that itâs protecting something. Thatâs why I think thereâs treasure behind it.â (Carol)
Carol indicates a possible treasure.
âCertainly. My hunch also said that it was suspicious. Thereâs a possibility that itâs protecting something.â (Kagali)
âItâs also possible that theyâre protecting the treasure, not knowing itâs already been taken.â (Yuna)
ââ¦â¦â
ââ¦â¦â
ââ¦â¦â
ââ¦â¦â
They got silenced by my words.
âI canât rule out that possibility, but that doesnât mean we canât go looking for treasure.â (Carol)
âBesides, weâve come this far, so we canât just give up now.â (Mia)
âSurely there must be something.â (Carol)
Well, even I have no intention of going home like this.
Besides, if I go home as is, Iâll be curious whether thereâs treasure. I just want to confirm.
Thatâs why Iâm going to go treasure hunting like everyone else.
âSo what do you know about those knight armors?â (Yuna)
âAs I mentioned earlier, there are two types of knight armors, those that move and those that donât. The moving ones have a specific range of action, and if you go outside of that range, you wonât be attacked.â (Carol)
Carol explains.
âWill I be attacked if I enter that range?â (Yuna)
âIt doesnât seem to work unless you get close enough.â (Carol)
âSo, from a distance, itâs hard to tell the difference between a moving and a non-moving knight armor.â (Yuna)
Itâs undoubtedly annoying.
But there is a way to deal with it.
âIn that case, all you have to do is destroy them all.â (Yuna)
ââ¦â¦â
Everyone looks at me as if my suggestion dumbfounds them.
âWell, itâs certainly as Yuna said. It doesnât matter whether it moves or not. If you destroy it, there shouldnât be any danger.â (Kagali)
âUu, certainly, Yuna who can easily defeat a knight armor might be able to do it.â (Mia)
As for the knight armors, we agreed that if we find them, we will destroy them regardless of whether they move.
âCome to think of it, did your grandfatherâs note say anything about this place?â (Kagali)
Mia and Carol look troubled at Kagali-sanâs question.
âWhat, you canât talk about it?â (Kagali)
âNot that I canât talk about it, but I canât read it.â (Mia)
âYou canât read it?â (Kagali)
âGrandpaâs handwriting was so bad, all I could figure out was the location of this place.â (Mia)
âShow me.â (Kagali)
âIf you can read it, then by all means.â (Mia)
Mia hands out a dirty piece of paper to Kagali-san.
After receiving the paper, Kagali-san looks at it. Fina is also interested, and she peers from the side.
âWhatâs this?â (Kagali)
âI canât read it.â (Fina)
âIsnât it? Grandpaâs handwriting has been so bad since long ago that I couldnât read it. Heâll just say âAs long as I can read, thatâs all that mattersâ. Thereâs a map of this location, so I somehow understood it. Even so, just reading the name of the town is already a big hurdle.â (Mia)
I received the paper from Kagali-san, who gave up reading.
Ugh, it sure is messy.
But it doesnât seem impossible to read.
âI have finally found the city of Heschlag.â
âWait, you can read it?â (Kagali)
Perhaps thanks to my otherworldly language translation capabilities, I can read the text as if it were normal Japanese characters. It seems that they are properly recognized as characters. However, the characters are expressed to the point of being even beyond messy.
But I can read it because itâs converted to Japanese.
âEtto, I guess, somehow?â (Yuna)
I gave a vague answer and decided to keep reading.
âSomehow I managed to find the town of Heschlag. I immediately began our search, but I immediately discovered that I couldnât use any magical tools in the town. This is going to make my search very difficult.â
âSo it was written that you canât use magic tools.â (Carol)
âI was looking for something in the town, but the buildings are crumbling and thereâs nothing of interest. Still, I canât leave here without getting something. My first grandchild will be born soon. I want to find something for him.â
âGrandchild, could it be me?â (Mia)
âUnless you have cousins or cousins in your relatives, then I suppose.â (Kagali)
âI donât think there are, as far as I know.â (Mia)
âThere are knight armors in a certain place. Suspicious. There must be something ahead. However, when you get close, the knight armors will attack you. I donât have the means to fight, so I can only run away.â
âGrandpa, he canât fight like me.â (Mia)
âNo, I think itâs amazing that he came back safely even though he canât fight.â (Kagali)
âYouâre right about that. If it wasnât for Yuna, Iâd be dead by now.â (Mia)
Mia said reluctantly.
I continued reading.
âIt turns out that the knight armors are gathering at a certain place. That one big building.â
âThatâs where Mia and Carol were attacked, right?â (Yuna)
âWhat about the rest of it?â (Kagali)
âI understand that part. Thereâs a map.â (Mia)
As Mia said, it was a simple map. Itâs a map of the town, thereâs a circle drawn on the map, and somebody wrote the word âarmorâ on it.
âAnyway, it said armor, it had a ã on it. You went to the place and saw the knight armors, right?â (Yuna)
Apparently, I couldnât read the characters that were supposed to say knight armors.
âWhat was there?â (Yuna)
Mia shakes her head.
âI havenât looked into it in detail. But, it wasnât a big building. Besides, if thereâs anything like it, itâs more likely to be the building where Yuna saved us, right?â (Mia)
âYeah, that building is suspicious, since there are knight armors in that place. There must be a reason to have knight armors stationed there, right?â (Kagali)
âDoesnât Grandpaâs note say something?â (Mia)
I look at the note.
âI canât do it anymore. Itâs too dangerous. I give up. I canât die before I see my grandchild. If I tell my son, he will go. But he, just like me, will not be able to handle a knight armor. He will have a child. I donât want him to do anything dangerous. So I will not tell him. I will take this place to my grave.â
âGrandpaâ¦â¦â (Mia)
He took it with him to the grave.
But it may have been difficult to tell his son about the knight armors.
âRegardless of grandpaâs feelings, father and mother went somewhere and never came home.â (Mia)
ââ¦Mia-chan.â (Carol)
âIâm fine. Thank you for reading it, Yuna. It was nice to get to know Grandpa a little better.â (Mia)
Mia looks happy when she receives the note.
Iâm glad I could help, even if it was just a little.
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Authorâs Note:
For some reason, I thought it would be better if the letters written by Fina were different from those written by others, thatâs why Grandpaâs note was messy.