Chapter 54
Surviving as a Broken Hero
ââ¦â
ââ¦â
He watched me silently as I waited for my answer, my heart beating against my chest.
âGo onâ¦â
That seemed to have gotten his attention, at least.
âYou know the rulers of this city are dragons, right?â
âNoâ¦â
âOhâ¦â
Had he not even been to the city on his chase after me?
âWell, itâs pretty common knowledge that theyâre dragons, I guess. You can even see them fly overhead from time to time, and I saw one in humanoid form back when we escaped from the dungeon.â
He leaned forward, eyes glinting in interest as whatever ideas he had were going through his head.
âSo youâre saying you want to kill the city leaders? Bold. I didnât have you down as the type to kill someone just for their race, do you have something against dragons?
He misunderstood my intent. It wasnât that I wanted to kill them just because they were dragons. I was sure he had heard of the demon attack on Karfana, at least. I didnât really want to explain to him about Krylla or what she was protecting under the surface of the mountains, so I elected to just explain using what had happened back in the city.n/o/vel/b//in dot c//om
âYou remember Karfana, right?â
âThe monster attack? Yeah, what about it.â
âWell, they werenât monsters.â
âThen what were they?â
âDemons.â
âPfft.â He let out a low chuckle at my declaration like he found the mention of demons funny.
âElves, dwarves, humans, demons, monsters, all the same, really, we just kill what we call monsters because itâs what weâre told and itâs convenient to us. Is not a dragon also a monster?â
âIs he philosophizing to me right now?â
I guess he had a point of sorts, and it briefly caused the question of why the Second System only seemed to reward XP for killing demons to my mind and how the primary System actually had also awarded me for killing other humans.
âAnyway⦠These demons seem to be wider spread than initially thought and are actively trying to bring this city to ruin.â
âSo youâre saying that the dragons are working with them, then? Whereâs your proof?â
Would he believe Leinâs words as evidence enough? I doubted it. Maybe he would be able to sense a strange energy if he encountered a dragon, but had he ever encountered one before? Would he be able to recognize that their aura was off at a glance?
After all, if one had never encountered something before, how would they be able to recognize that something was strange when they did encounter that thing?
âThis.â
I pulled back my sleeve and held out my arm that had the tattoo on it. When I encountered the dragon in humanoid form back at the dungeon, feeling the strong presence of demonic energy made me recognize what the familiar energy coming from the tattoo wasâ¦
Demonic energy.
Besides figuring out a way to kill the city leaders, who were either colluding with demons, possessed by demonsâwhich I didnât even know if that was possibleâor actually demons, figuring out a way to remove the tattoo was also on my priority list.
âThe mark that they put on newcomers to the city?â He glanced at the shredded skin on his arm as if to check if there was a tattoo there.
âThey were too busy to bother,â I said, answering his question before he could ask.
He leaned closer to my extended wrist, taking a close look at the tattoo.
âHmm⦠Iâm going to use a skill, stay still.â
Koise held his hand over the tattoo, concentrating for a few moments before a steady green glow emerged from his hand and covered the tattoo.
I saw his eyes flitting over a System message that only he could see, the results of whatever skill he had just used.
âDemonic energy⦠Hmm⦠It doesnât really prove anything, but itâs enough to justify a closer look, at least. Do you already have a plan?â
âNo, I was just getting to that part.â
âWell, whatâs the smartest thing youâve hunted?â
âSmartest? Why does that matter?â
I thought for a few moments. The smartest thing I had fought had probably been the city lord of Karfana when he was trying to create the expanding dungeon.
âThe dungeon boss of Karfana.â
He shook his head and clicked his tongue at my answer.
âNo, that wasnât a hunt, that was just a fight. I asked what the smartest thing youâve hunted was, not killed.â
When he put it like that, I hadnât really hunted much of anything. I had only actually gotten my abilities not long before that, after all.
The answer must have been plain on my face.
âAnd you were planning to take down a dragon? If my goal was for you to die, I guess I could just leave with that already accomplished. Do you even know anything about dragons?â
Of course I knew things about dragons, I had hung around in an Association building for years hearing nothing save for tales from Awakeners about their hunts and the hunts of others. Dragons, of course, had been a huge topic.
âTheyâre weak in human form, their fire can be countered with a good dousing of water, silver weapons cut through their scales like a hot knife through butter, they love to talk about themselves, they never go back on their word, and they love to prolong their battles.â
Everyone knew that the best party for taking down a dragon consisted of a mage with water spells, a hunter with silver arrows, a fast talker to goad and distract the dragon and maybe even trick it into agreeing to stay in human form so the party could kill it while it was weak, and the classic hero with a sword to land the final blow if the talker failed.
âHahahahah!â
He actually laughed at me, a hearty laugh that told me he found something that I had said hilarious.
âYeah, youâd be dead in moments. You were seriously going to base your plan on tall tales you heard in a tavern or something from people who had heard them from other peopleâwho had heard them from other people and so on? How have you lived this long? Are you just good at fighting or something? I bet your plan was just to ambush it in human form or try to appeal to its honor for a human-form duel or something equally stupid.â
My plans actually had been somewhere along those lines. It made sense to fight it when it was in its weakest form, after all.
I was a bit put out and even offended by his words, and my silence must have said everything.
âLook, first of all, get all that bullshit out of your head. Dragons arenât weak in human form at all. In fact, theyâre just as strong, if not stronger. You donât think their human skin is just as tough as their scales? Also, theyâre just as strong in any form they take, forget about whether they actually look less intimidating or not.â
He was looking at me seriously, ticking off the points on his fingers as he spoke.
âSecond, their fire cannot be countered with a good dousing of water. A dragonâs breath cannot be put out by normal water of any sortâyou could dive to the bottom of a lake and be boiled in seconds from a concentrated blast of it.â
He lifted the third finger.
âThird, you would just be wasting good silver if you used a silver weapon on one. What the hell do you think dragons are, werewolves or something? Granted, itâs not a bad guess, silver usually works well against beast-like beingsâbut no. A dragon is as weak to silver as they are any other metalâwhich is not very.â
His fourth finger ticked up. He was getting heated as he spoke, and I could see the fire in his eyes igniting. Even while he was telling me everything I had said wrong, he was thinking of what would work.
âFourth, dragons like talking about themselves about as much as they like talking about anything else, which is not very, especially not to beings they deem lower than themselves. A dragon isnât going to care about honoring their word or anything stupid like that against things it views as no more than we might view a chicken.â
âFinally, your last point may have a point in that they like to enjoy the excitement of a fight as much as anyone else, especially against an opponent they already know they have thoroughly beaten.â
Holding his hand up with all five fingers extended, he lowered them one by one as he began countering with what actually would work against dragons.
âOne, itâs actually probably best to fight a dragon in its biggest or most natural form. They make a bigger target and are easier to wound that wayâitâs much easier to dig at the soft flesh underneath a scale than it is to pierce human flesh thatâs as tough as scales.â
âTwo, the biggest problem you face when fighting a dragon in its natural and weakest form is their dragon breath, which you just have to avoid or redirect somehow. Any attempt to take it head-on is a death wish.â
âThree, while they may not be weak against silver, they are weak against scarlet steel. Unfortunately, everything seems to be weak to scarlet steel, which means everyone wants it when itâs already near-impossible to find and is usually only found in the highest-tier equipment.â
âFour, a dragon might acknowledge us if it views us on the same field or threat level as it, which isnât likely unless we do something to impress it. Even then, an âhonorableâ duel is dubious at best.â
His last finger slowly curled downward again while he made his last point.
âAnd five, if a dragon tries to prolong the fight, youâve already lost.â
It was all quite informative, and I had no doubt that his sources were more trustworthy than mine. However, all of that left me with a questionâ¦
âHave you ever hunted a dragon before?â
His eyes brimming with the fire of determination, he spoke.
âNo, but Iâve always wanted to.â