Joan idly nudged the food on her plate around. At least this time she could identify some of it. Potatoes, a light pink meat that tasted a lot like ham and small bowl of a black paste that, frankly, she didnât want to know what was in it. It was at least savory and not poisonous. She couldnât remember ever having potatoes while in the demon lands, though, and suspected Isla procured them to try and make her feel better.
Not that it was doing much good. It had been a week since the chosen had left and she felt miserable. Her days were simple enough. Wake up, have a meal with the princess, maybe if she was lucky sheâd hear a little bit of news from the regents report for Isla, but Frisk almost always had her leave first if there was anything âimportantâ to discuss.
Then she mostly just sat in her room and wrote down anything else she could remember to have the chosen do later. The only thing really breaking it up was when she was called to dine with the princess. She knew she was supposed to be resting and recovering but she didnât feel that tired. She just felt bored. Sheâd even begun to train her magic and swordplay in her room, but it didnât feel nearly as effective as it had as a hero.
Joan just couldnât train nearly as hard anymore. Worse, she couldnât feel much progress with the little she could do. She felt another small moment of frustration at her past self. She remembered all those times sheâd begin to practice and train and master something in a matter of days. Things that had taken others âdecadesâ to learn. âYearsâ to hone their bodies. The Hero had always rolled his eyes and either assumed they were exaggerating or lazy.
She didnât know how normal people dealt with it all the time. She felt like she was going to go mad at this rate. Though, she supposed most people didnât have the memories of doing it far faster and more effectively than they could now. It likely wasnât as infuriating to take weeks to master something when you didnât have memories of honing it in a matter of days or even hours.
âAre you enjoying your meal?â Isla asked.
âHuh? Oh, yes, itâs fine,â Joan said before giving the demon a small smile. Isla had been kind enough to find the potatoes, the least she could do was be grateful. âSorry.â
âFor what?â Isla asked.
âFor nothing this time, I guess,â Joan said before sighing again. âEverything? I donât know. Just⦠sorry. For sending Andreas off.â
âHeâs one of the chosen now,â Isla said. âI have to be willing to accept that heâll run off and do all kinds of things like this. Same as my sister.â
âDonât you worry about him? Want to be with him?â Joan asked before she could stop herself.
âOf course I do,â Isla said. âSimilar to how you obviously wish you were with them now. But he has his duties, I have mine. I canât imagine how my little sister managed both. She must have been quite the sight. How did she deal with things when she left?â
Joan sighed and shook her head. âI couldnât say. I didnât pay much attention except whenâ¦â She trailed off for a moment and frowned. âI guess she had a regent as well? But, to be fair, it was years from now. Things were more stable for them then, I imagine.â
âOh,â Isla said. âStable? Do things not seem very stable here?â
Joan paused and quickly focused her attention on the potatoes. âThese really are quite good. Did they boil them?â
Isla gave a light chuckle and shook her head. âIâm not insulted, Joan. Even if I was, do you really believe Iâd let such a minor comment upset me?â
âMayyyyyybe,â Joan said nervously. âAnd I donât know. You do the political thing. I donât understand all of that. I just run places and stab things with a sword. And now I canât even do that.â
Isla gave another soft sigh. âYouâre doing plenty, Joan. The chosen can do the âstabbingâ part now. I can handle the politics. All you need do is handle the guidance portion of this task. Pushing yourself past the breaking point aids no one.â
Joan rolled her eyes. âEasy for you to say. What youâre doing is actually useful. All Iâm doing is telling people what useful things they can do.â
âThat is useful,â Isla said.
âDo you believe what I am doing is helping anyone?â Joan asked.
That made Isla pause and a small, concerned smile formed on her face. âOf course I do, Joan.â
âDo you even believe Iâm who I say I am?â Joan asked.
Isla gave another soft sigh before nodding. âI do, somewhat.â
âSomewhat?â Joan asked.
âLet us just leave it at that, shall we?â Isla said. âAt the very least you have access to information the chosen need and aids them in their duties. As such, you are valuable and must be kept safe. While I may not believe everything you claim, I believe that you are certainly a gift from the gods in many ways.â
Joan gave another sigh before nodding. At least it was better than being called a spy. The door to the dining hall was suddenly slammed open, making her jump. Frisk came running into the hall, his robe pulled up slightly to allow him to run. âLady Isla! A dragon!â
âWhat?â Isla asked.
âA dragon, it is flying over the city! Please, you must come at once!â
âWHAT?!â Isla yelled before getting to her feet and racing out the door, Frisk right behind her. Joan was only a few feet behind them, her own heart pounding. Had something gone wrong? Had they messed up? Why would a dragon come here? What if it was unrelated and had nothing to do with Searle? Questions flooded her mind every step of the way until, finally, they made it out to the main courtyard.
Only to see Searle and Bauteut climbing off the back of a massive golden wyvern. âThatâs not a dragon,â Joan said. âThatâs a wyvern. Two back legs and the wings have their claws, thatâs how you can tell.â
Searle, meanwhile, was lightly patting the wyvern on the head while Bauteut slowly stretched her legs out a few times before holding up her hands. âItâs okay! Itâs friendly! It wonât hurt anybody!â
âYouâre back sooner than we expected,â Isla said.
âWe got a lift,â Bauteut said before motioning towards the wyvern. âThe Emerald Dragon was incredibly generous. It was amazing, really! I canât wait to tell you all about it! This was the most exciting, exhilarating and terrifying thing Iâve ever done!â
âThat sounds delightful,â Isla said, her eyes still locked on the wyvern. âIt wonât⦠eat⦠anyone, will it? Should we prepare a meal?â
âOh, no, it ate on the way here,â Bauteut said. âThat was also terrifying. I donât know about Searle, but Iâm half starved. Weâve been riding for hours.â
âThen please, err, come with me,â Isla said. âFrisk, could you have the cooks prepare some more lunch for the chosen and his attendant?â
âAt once, my lady,â Frisk said with a small bow.
Bauteut glanced down to Joan, a massive smile on her lips. âI canât wait to tell you everything! It was amazing!â
âCanât wait,â Joan said sheepishly.
------
âI thought I was dead,â Bauteut said. âAll I could see was the fire, but then Searle, well, Searle, you tell them.â
âIt wasnât that impressive,â Searle said, his cheeks burning.
âI disagree, it was amazing,â Bauteut said. âCome on, tell them.â
Searle blushed but, none the less, he had a huge smile on his face. âWell, I knew I couldnât block all of the fire with my shield. I really thought, well, I thought it was over. I thought I was going to fail. But I couldnât just let her die. Not after everything. So I just reached deep inside me and it was like⦠I just knew what to do, you know? Or my shield did, at least. Iâd never cast anything like it. But I wrapped us both in this powerful spiked barrier. The fire couldnât even penetrate it. But thatâs where it got really interesting. I was able to reflect the fire right back at them, using it.â
âInteresting?â Bauteut asked before bursting into giggles. âOh, no. The whole thing with the spiders? That was interesting. The wyvern chase? THAT was interesting. But that? That was INCREDIBLE! Iâve never seen anything like it! I didnât even know something like that was possible!â
âIt wasnât that big a deal,â Searle said sheepishly.
Joan idly picked at her plate and tried to force the smile to stay on her face. âIt sounds like you were pretty impressive, Searle. Iâm really happy you two were okay in the end. So the Emerald Dragon agreed?â
âYes,â Bauteut said. âShe wonât join the war directly. But she has agreed to extend her territory across the north pass. Thatâll cut off the Demon Lordâs army from going that way and some of his supply lines at the least. Oh, and she gave me this to give you.â She then reached down to her left arm with her right hand and began to unstrap a long, yellow jewel encrusted bracer. She then held it out to Joan. âHere.â
Joan blinked a few times before taking it, then glancing up at Bauteut in confusion. The healer had one on her right arm as well an almost perfect duplicate. âWhat is it?â
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âA shield, kind of,â Bauteut said. âApparently she was really impressed by how we worked together and she granted me this. How did she put it? âAs a companion to the shield, one must accept that his protections cannot always be there.â I mentioned you and she gave me a matching pair, one for each of us. Theyâre pretty cool, you can activate it to create a magical shield around yourself and, if it breaks, all you need to do is hold it in the light of the sunrise and it will restore its magic.â
âYour adventure sounded absolutely breathtaking,â Isla said. âYou two must be exhausted.â
âI mean, I canât talk for Searle,â Bauteut said. âBut I feel pretty great. The Emerald Dragon was amazing. Once we passed her trials she showed us to this magical hot spring and it was amazing. She also taught me this really amazing healing spell to help reduce the strain when someone is healed. I imagine Joan will get a lot of use out of it, knowing her.â
Joanâs cheeks went scarlet and she nudged her potatoes around. âWow, that sounds absolutely⦠amazing.â
âAre you okay?â Searle asked, staring at her.
âIâm fine,â Joan said quickly. âJust thinking.â
âAbout where to send us next?â Bauteut asked.
âYes,â Joan lied. Honestly the main thought on her mind was that the Emerald Dragon had never let the Hero ride any of her wyverns. Nor had the Hero been granted any special boons. The dragon had merely given the Hero the information they required and that was it. She wondered if the Hero had just been rude and angered her, or if it was some other reason. But she couldnât help feeling jealous.
âI bet if we left quickly, the wyvern would be willing to give us a lift,â Bauteut said. âIf thatâs okay with you, Searle?â
âHuh? Oh, of course,â Searle said before turning back to her.
âYou two canât mean to leave so soon,â Isla said. âYou only just returned. Donât you desire more time to recover?â
âI mean, weâre making good progress,â Bauteut said. âWe have the time and energy, why not? Oh, right! I forgot to tell you about the trolls. So, on our third night outâ¦â
Joan barely listened when Bauteut started on another story of the amazing adventure they had.
Without her.
------
Joan loved Andreas. Truly, she did. Of all the chosen she had fought besides, he was one of the two who had always stayed by her side. Even if he had tricked her and made her almost believe he had betrayed her in this life, it didnât make him any less a dear and wonderful friend for her.
The only thing she wished she could of fixed was how many times he had looked so saddened and depressed. The number of times he had suffered, unsure of what he was missing. The very joy that had been cut from his life long before sheâd even met him in those lives.
So knowing that, she was overjoyed that, in this life, he didnât have loss. His heart was not broken or empty. He had a spirit, a joy about him, that she had never known him to have. It was almost as if he was another person.
Despite all that, if she had to watch him make kissy face with Isla one more minute she was pretty sure she would throw up. âAHEM,â she said before rolling her eyes. âCan you please continue?â
Andreas gave a light chuckle from his position next to Isla, though the two were so close she wondered why they even needed two chairs. âWell, when I got through the last barrier, there it was. The sword. Just standing there, waiting for me. It was trapped, of course. Honestly, with all the effort it took I really should have just made some of the other chosen come.â
Joan rolled her eyes when he started nuzzling his betrothed again and the demonâs tail wrapped around his arm. âAHEM.â
âOh Joan,â Isla said with a chuckle. âYouâll understand when youâre older.â
âI am older than both of you,â Joan said bitterly. âSo, a trap?â
âMmm hm. This massive, shadowy monster. With six heads, like a hydra made of shadows. We fought for hours before I managed to gain the upper hand by throwing the spear, piercing both it and the sword in a single movement. With the sword shattered, the trapped souls were released once more and the curse of darkness was lifted.â
âPerfect,â Joan said before getting to her feet. âIâm going to go gag in my room, I mean figure out where you can go next. Please, keep your hands off each other long enough for me to leave. Ugh.â
Isla snickers and Andreas, to her annoyance, didnât even look slightly embarrassed. âNo promises,â he said. âHowever, Joan, I did find something for you.â He held out his left hand and there was a flicker of darkness before he tossed something small towards her. She caught it and, to her surprise, it was a strange, obsidian ring.
âWhatâs this?â Joan asked.
âA magic ring I found while there,â Andreas said before giving Isla a small kiss on one of her horns, drawing a gagging noise from Joan. âOh, relax. Youâve probably seen worse. Itâs not much use to me, but apparently itâs got a small shadow weaving spell on it, making them cloak around and hide you.â
Joan rolled her eyes before glancing at the ring. Ah, of course. So she could hide better. Oddly, she remembered finding this ring when theyâd done this in her past lives.
It had been entirely useless and theyâd ended up selling it to some merchant. Simple shadow spells like that had been so easy for the Hero, Andreas and Korgron to perform that it had been all but useless.
âAwwww, you got her a gift but not me?â Isla said in a light, pouty tone. âI thought I was supposed to be your princess.â
âYouâre everyoneâs princess,â Andreas said with a light laugh.
Joan groaned. âI really hope that didnât come out right.â
âIt sounded better in my head,â Andreas said. âBut I did get something for you, actually. My precious little--â
Joan didnât hear the rest of that exchange because she walked out from the room and closed the door behind herself.
Even if she did prefer âhappyâ Andreas to âmiserableâ Andreas, she really wished he could be less âsappy and in loveâ Andreas.
Ugh.
------
âIt was amazing,â Korgron said. She towered over her âaudienceâ of Isla and Joan. One foot resting on a chair while she leaned into it. âThere it is, the Eye of the Night. And well, I donât know why she called that âguardianâ a god, but it didnât stand a chance. Well, okay, it had a very small chance,â the demon said with a boisterous laugh. âWe fought for at least two days. Hell, we even ended up splitting that little tower of hers in half! It was amazing. That spell you taught me was incredible, Joan.â
Joan flushed and couldnât help but nod, mesmerized by the story. âI just wanted to be sure you could use it if she caused too much trouble. Sorry it only works during the day.â
âEven if just during the day it was incredible. I havenât felt so alive in ages!â Korgron said with a loud, gleeful laugh. âI felt like I could have taken on the world! Also, the Eye of the Night? Amazing. Iâm just going to hold onto it until I see Andreas next,â she said, her tail flickering back and forth in excitement. âHe may be the chosen of darkness, but Iâm going to put it to a lot of use in the meantime.â
âSister,â Isla said in a firm, mildly annoyed tone. âDo you mind NOT breaking the table? Also, youâve scattered your meal all over. What would the cook think?â
âThat I was amazing, obviously,â Korgron said before dropping into her seat and scooping some of the dried fruits back onto her plate. âOther than that? She wasnât much of a problem. A bit sarcastic, but after what I did to that little âgodâ of hers, she was quite eager to do as I asked.â
âSo a total success, then?â Joan asked.
âEntirely. Sheâs even agreed to stop allowing anyone through her lands. It should at least make it a bit more difficult for the war effort. Maybe buy some time, get them to pull back,â Korgron said before popping another fruit into her mouth. âWhere to next?â
âActually, about that,â Joan said.
âWait, hold that thought. I got you something,â Korgron said before snapping her fingers. Her satchel appeared over the table for a moment before dropping down onto it. She rifled through it and pulled out a small bronze amulet shaped like a skull. âHere. I already examined it, itâs good.â She tossed it to her.
Joan caught it and looked at it for a few moments. It did look familiar, she was sure she had seen it before. Wait, no. In her past lives. It--
âIt will protect you from poisons and things like that. As a demon and, well, as a chosen, Iâm pretty much immune already. But I figured itâll help you not accidentally die to something like that,â Korgron said. âYou wonât have to worry about your food anymore, either.â
Joan stared at the small skull and struggled, as hard as she could, to keep the smile on her face. âWhy thank you, Korgron. It is such a sweet gift. Iâll wear it proudly,â she said before sliding it over her head. A shield, a way to hide and protection from poisons. Could the chosen find just one thing that didnât help keep her safe like some kind of child? Even more humiliating, they were items that, were she still the Hero, she would have tossed aside as her own innate abilities were far superior. Still, she supposed she had best be grateful that they were thinking of her at all. âSo Iâve been thinking about where weâd go next.â
âNext?â Korgron asked.
âWell, I mean, there are still plenty of things to take care of while weâre here. You and I could--â
âWait, wait wait,â Korgron said with a light laugh. âFirst of all, Iâve got things I need to take care of while I am here, so itâll be a few days. Second, Iâm not sure youâre ready to go anywhere yet.â
âWhat? Itâs been almost a month!â Joan yelled before getting to her feet. âIâve been good and patient! You canât just leave me here forever! Iâm not a child, I can do this too!â
âJoan,â Korgron said. âYou are a child.â
âNo, Iâm not,â Joan said. âIâve fought, killed, died, have more experience than all of the chosen combined. Even if I didnât, I have training and experience outside of that. Iâm competent and--â
âWeâre fighting things that I wouldnât want the greatest warriors in our kingdom facing,â Korgron said. âCertainly not you. We need you, Joan. Weâve had this talk before.â
Joan stared at her, her entire body quivering. Finally she just sat down and sighed. âItâs because I got swaddled, isnât it?â
âWhat?â Korgron asked.
âThe first time you saw me, I was all bundled up and looked helpless. I knew that was such a stupid idea,â Joan said bitterly. âOf all the--â
âThatâs not why,â Korgron said. âJoan, please. Try and understand, this is for your own good and protection. We care about you. We just want you to stay where itâs safe.â
Joan tried to keep her frustration under control, if she threw a tantrum she knew Korgron would never trust her to come. âFine,â she said before sitting back down. âYouâre right. What if I choose a much safer thing for us to do?â
Korgron sighed before nodding. âYes, but not this time. After Bucket returns and is sure youâre fully good to go, okay.â
âHer name is Bauteut,â Joan said. âWhy canât you check me? Youâre just as good at healing people as she is. No, youâre better. And you said last time that youâd let me come if I was better.â
âIâm as good at healing magic, yes,â Korgron said. âBut sheâs better at identifying damage. If she gives you the okay once she returns, then--â
âThere are other healers,â Joan said.
âNot human ones,â Korgron said.
Joan struggled to avoid screaming. A human or demon healer, it didnât make that much of a difference. She bet Korgron just didnât want her to come at all, so she was delaying her. There was absolutely no reason for her to be this protective of her.
Okay, she knew there were plenty of reasons to be this protective but she still hated it. She struggled, desperately, to contain the growing tantrum. âFine. You win,â Joan said. âIâll be patient. Iâm not very hungry so Iâm going to go get some sleep.â She got to her feet and walked towards the door. Korgron called out to her, but she ignored her and just kept walking. She wasnât useless. She wasnât helpless. They couldnât keep treating her like this, she knew what she was doing.