Difference between revisions of "User:Démiurge"
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− | == Chapitre |
+ | == Chapitre 5 : Pour répondre (Pragmatisme)== |
+ | Et donc, |
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− | However, those great wings |
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+ | la marionnette s'enfuit vers le ciel que l'oisillon désirait tant, |
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− | failed to reach the sky. |
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+ | vers ce monde étroit et sombre. |
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+ | Oui... |
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− | For there was no sky in that world. |
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+ | Un ciel pour que la marionnette soit à l'abri du mal, pour sourire du cœur. |
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+ | Un endroit où personne ne les piétinerait, où personne ne les blesserait, |
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+ | aucune force ne les contraint, aucun besoin de changer. |
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− | An empty world that lied, saying they could go anywhere. |
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+ | Un nouveau monde où ils pourraient voler. |
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− | An empty voice that would not let them go anywhere. |
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+ | |||
− | An empty cage that told them how to live— |
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+ | Ce jour-là, |
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− | Every time those wings opened, |
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+ | L'oisillon savait très bien que ça ne serait probablement jamais le cas. |
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− | aversion and curiosity, |
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+ | L'oisillon implora la marionnette, qui jura de se battre : |
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− | inclusion and exclusion, |
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+ | Aucun ciel ne vaut la peine de te voir souffrir. |
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− | a force barred the sky. |
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+ | Alors la marionnette, elle aussi, s'enfuit dans cette même cage. |
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− | Seeing the baby bird’s tears, the puppet said: |
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+ | Jusqu'à ce que nous trouvions un moyen de créer ce ciel, |
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+ | c'est ce que pensait la marionnette dans ce monde étouffant. |
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− | Let’s take our time and think how we can escape this cage. |
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+ | Pensée et seulement pensée... |
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− | The puppet entered the bird’s cage. |
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+ | Doutant et vacillant, ne trouvant rien à chercher, |
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− | Let’s think together how to spread your wings and fly. |
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+ | la marionnette pensait toujours à cette promesse : |
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+ | |||
− | Always together… |
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+ | Ce jour-là, |
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− | Just as we promised. They smiled… |
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+ | dans un nouveau pays, regardant les cieux, |
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− | == Partie 1 == |
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+ | voyant le bébé oiseau déployer ses ailes et sourire, |
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− | There was no sky in that world…physically. |
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+ | la marionnette vide - le ciel - Sora - |
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− | The capital of Hardenfell—a massive space said to lie ten thousand meters below the surface. Sora and Shiro got down from the subterrane and viewed that expansive underground city. Both were lost in thought figuring out how they could describe what stretched in front of them. Technically, not just in front. Also above, below, behind, to the left, and to the right. If they were to describe this 360-degree panorama just as they saw it. |
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+ | Traduit avec www.DeepL.com/Translator (version gratuite) |
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− | “Let me guess. Your chieftain is the president of a corporation that rhymes with Thinra.” |
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+ | == Partie 1 == |
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− | “…What does Demi…actually…do…anyway?” |
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+ | ...Une scène remplie de l'écho de l'éruption de la Forge Sacrée... le site d'élimination des déchets. |
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− | If you did an image search for “factory nightscape,” you’d probably get the right idea. A steel jungle floating fantastically with countless dazzling light sources sparkling in the darkness. It basically looked like a slight modification of Midgar from the seventh installment of that one series where both of the words begin with F. As if they’d used a Gravity spell to ignore all those laws of physics and stuff and copy-pasted it in every direction and there you go. What you saw was what you got—no sky, no up or down. The upshot: |
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+ | Une gigantesque machine humanoïde argentée avance à pas lourds dans les ruines souterraines ensevelies sous les déchets métalliques. Des larmes coulent dans les yeux ardents de Veig qui marmonne avec désolation le premier souci de sa vie. |
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− | “They even have the Mako Reactors. Just say it. The chieftain’s Ruf*s, isn’t he?" |
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+ | "... Ai-je vraiment fait quelque chose de si mal... ?" |
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− | Seeing a pillar of light thrusting through the center of the city, Sora threw this question over his shoulder half in earnest. |
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+ | Il se souvint des deux âmes qu'il avait fracassées après une lutte inattendue - l'âme de cette petite herbe étrangement coriace aux seins excellents, et l'âme de cette vipère incompréhensiblement toxique qui avait fait craquer son épée pour la première fois. Se balançant sombrement, vacillant en avant, il pensait : |
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− | @ |
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+ | ...Que diable ai-je fait... ? |
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− | "—Oh! No, Master. That is the aforementioned fire of the Old Deus Ocain—the Holy Forge.” |
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+ | Veig se souvenait avoir été remercié, mais jamais blâmé. Pourtant, tout ce qu'il ressentait maintenant était un mystérieux sentiment de culpabilité gravé dans son âme trop profondément pour le nier. Maintenant, il se tenait là, devant la masse métallique tombée, la machine gisant sur le sol avec ses membres totalisés. |
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− | Jibril had been looking about, eyes agleam with excitement, but she hurried to lower her head as she spoke. |
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+ | "...Ho... J'ai bien dit que je serais en retard, mais pour faire une sieste, tu as du cran, hein ?" |
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− | “The Dwarves are one of the rare races whose creator is alive and well, and still resides with them. The industrial utility of the Holy Forge allows it to serve as the driving force of this advanced mechanical civilization—this city.” |
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+ | Veig a regardé attentivement le cadre cassé. Par le biais du système de communication, il a accusé ses pilotes de faire les morts. |
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− | Advanced mechanical civilization—huh. They’d seen plenty on the way to convince them of that. Such as the subterrane, which Til still wouldn’t exit… |
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+ | Dans ce jeu, les attaques ne causent aucun dommage direct à la machine adverse. Par conséquent, tout dommage doit provenir d'une défaillance du rite ou d'une erreur de tir - ou être auto-infligé. Et honnêtement, c'était les deux. L'intuition de Veig lui a dit. Il a soulevé le corps brisé et a hurlé. |
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− | Apparently, it was a ship that used “flow differentials” to travel through the earth. They hadn’t a clue what that meant, but anyway, they had traveled about nine thousand seven hundred kilometers to get here. Discounting the time Til had needed for repairs—a little under six hours. One thousand six hundred kilometers per hour… |
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+ | "Hey, je te parle !! Ton adversaire, c'est moi. Ne te retourne pas et ne meurs pas. Tu n'as aucun sens ?!" |
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− | …through solid ground. In their old world, that wasn’t even in the range of a submarine—you’d need a supersonic jet. Did the standard disclaimer for improbable physics—“ignoring friction”—apply to reality in this world? Even Shiro clutched her head. |
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+ | En effet... Sora et Shiro n'ont jamais eu la moindre chance contre Veig dans une bataille d'armes spirituelles. Il était donc inévitable qu'ils perdent. Mais quand même... |
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− | “…It’s pretty awesome, I’ll give you that. But with Jibril saying it was the most scientifically advanced civilization anywhere—” |
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+ | "Tu n'as pas l'intention de te taire sans dire un mot sur ton âme, n'est-ce pas ? !" |
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− | Sora took another look about Midgar—pardon, the capital of Hardenfell. A bit steampunk, but totally sci-fi. |
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+ | Oui, ils avaient tenu tête à Veig avec une tempête de balles impensable. Mais ils n'ont rien emporté de leur âme, le barrage était trop fragile. Tout ce qu'il a fait c'est rejeter l'attaque de Veig et dire non à son âme... |
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− | @ |
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+ | Il n'a rien dit. Il n'a rien admis. Leur âme avait seulement rejeté la sienne et était restée inébranlable. Veig a serré les dents. S'ils pouvaient faire autant, alors pourquoi ? |
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− | Yet even so… What was it? Somehow…it didn’t live up to his expectations. Something was off—or not exactly off, but… |
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+ | Il souleva le cadre en ruine comme s'il le tenait par le col et se mit en colère : |
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− | “Oh, no, Master. I merely indicated that it was the most mechanically advanced civilization in this world.” |
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+ | '''“Quand allez-vous répondre à ma question ?!”''' |
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− | Jibril interrupted Sora’s discordant thoughts with a correction and elaborated. |
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+ | Et il a enfin obtenu une réponse. |
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− | “If I may add—your world is far more advanced in science.” |
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+ | "...Tout de suite, je le ferai. Je vais vous donner votre réponse, je vais le faire." |
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− | …Huh. Compared to these bullshit Dwarves who messed with gravity to build 360-degree cities? These sick freaks who’d built this city in layers with no supports? |
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+ | ... Une voix a murmuré à travers la porte. |
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− | “Dwarven civilization is mechanically superlative—but by no means scientifically so. In fact, Dwarf is the race furthest removed from science… I suspect this will become clear to you quite soon. ♪” |
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+ | "Whuh ?!" |
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− | —? |
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+ | L'épave a soudainement répliqué en explosant, libérant un torrent d'âme fou. Elle lui répondit par une puissante imagerie qui lui vola momentanément sa conscience. |
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− | Mechanically advanced, scientifically advanced… What was the difference? Sora and Shiro exchanged skeptical looks, but Jibril just smiled knowingly. |
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+ | —…… |
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− | “With that, though with great reluctance—I shall take my leave to welcome our guests.” |
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+ | '''Il était au fond d'un petit trou, sombre et exigu. Veig connaissait la fille qui pleurait en regardant le ciel, seule. Il la connaissait bien... la fille incapable de voler, qui plus que quiconque admirait les oiseaux qui volaient si haut.''' |
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− | Her sullen voice lingered as she vanished into thin air. |
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+ | '''Une fille paradoxale, elle savait qu'elle ne pouvait pas voler et pourtant elle levait les yeux au ciel... Elle pleurait même si elle avait abandonné... Le monde l'interrogeait avec des questions sans réponse - pourquoi elle avait fui, pourquoi elle n'avait pas essayé - puis lui demandait pourquoi elle pleurait... et la méprisait pour cela. Il l'a laissée dans ce trou... sans rien vouloir...''' |
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− | And so, for now, those who remained were Sora, Shiro…and one other. That was Til, making furious use of countless tools to fix her spirit arm—her hammer. Her work had continued noisily since they were in route. “Hey,” started Sora— |
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+ | '''La fille solitaire... balançant son marteau à travers les larmes...... Il-''' |
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− | “Y-y-yes?! I-i-is the chieftain here? Help me!!” |
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+ | —…… |
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− | —to which she immediately shrieked from behind him and Shiro. She’d taken shelter in an instant, tears in her eyes, her hammer held defensively aloft. It had been too fast for Sora or Shiro to see or comprehend. |
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+ | Veig a essayé de tendre la main... mais blam, l'explosion a secoué la grotte et l'a tiré de sa rêverie. Dès qu'il a jeté un coup d'oeil autour de lui, peut-être plus tôt, il a deviné ce qui se passait. Il grimaça et hurla d'impatience. |
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− | @ |
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+ | "Quelle blague... Vous n'avez jamais eu personne là-dedans depuis le début ? C'était télécommandé... ?!" |
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− | "We dunno why you’re so freaked out. But can we say what we do know?” |
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+ | Maintenant que tu le dis, il n'y avait aucune règle qui disait que tu devais piloter la machine... si ? S'ils le contrôlaient depuis un cockpit à l'extérieur du cadre, ils pouvaient le balancer sans problème. |
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− | “…We’re…positive…we can’t do…shit, to help you.” |
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+ | Mais même si c'était télécommandé, ils devaient être connectés à leurs bras spirituels. Ce qui signifiait que faire exploser leur propre cadre si négligemment aurait des répercussions. Et en effet, le sol a tremblé avec une réaction en chaîne d'explosions l'une après l'autre dans toute la décharge. |
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− | If she had that kind of physical prowess and was still afraid…then hell if they could help her. |
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+ | Les esprits générés ont dessiné des lignes de lumière comme si elles circulaient dans des circuits gravés sur la scène. Le circuit de lumière convergeait pour le montrer : |
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− | “I disagree, I do!! I-I’ve somehow managed to overhaul my spirit arm—in time!!” |
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+ | La véritable unité ! |
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− | As if to confirm Til’s objection, her hammer made a clanging noise and emitted an intricate pattern of light beams. |
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+ | Désireux de voir où se trouvait le vrai cockpit, Veig a suivi la lumière de l'esprit jusqu'à sa destination. Il s'est avéré qu'il se trouvait au centre de la scène tremblante, si loin que sa fonction zoom était tout juste suffisante pour le distinguer. Au sommet d'une plante particulièrement haute, ses yeux ont trouvé leur cible et se sont ouverts en grand. Il s'agissait d'une fille qu'il connaissait bien, debout sur le siège d'un cockpit ouvert. |
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− | Sora and Shiro narrowed their eyes and went, Ah, I see. Not because of the transforming, initializing spirit arm. Rather, it was the pale blue fire shimmering in Til’s eyes—those eyes purportedly of orichalcum—that brought grins to Sora’s and Shiro’s faces. It was the determination in those eyes, that indomitable resolve burning with bright flame— |
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+ | "Vous demandez pourquoi j'ai fui ce monde sanglant, n'est-ce pas... ? ...C'est une question stupide, en effet." |
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− | "I’m not alone anymore, I’m not!! If the enemy comes—” |
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+ | Mais c'est une fille qu'il ne connaissait pas qui lui a murmuré. Ses yeux, embrasés d'un feu inextinguible, regardaient sa machine au loin. La fille, avec un morceau de ferraille en forme de marteau dans sa main, a parlé comme si elle déposait une déclaration de guerre. De son cœur, elle a dit son âme... pas des faits objectifs, mais ses sentiments : |
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− | —that iron will, bowing for no one, that roared from the mouth of that brown Loli monster girl. In other words—!! |
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+ | "C'est parce que je méprise ce monde, vraiment." |
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− | '''*****''' |
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+ | == Partie 2 == |
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− | "—you’ll hold me, you will!! And then! I’ll be so ☆ very ☆ safe—!” |
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+ | Til’s voice, resolute, was yet like her limbs…jittery. She couldn’t help but tremble, because of what she saw down there from the open cockpit—Veig standing there in the venue that still quaked from the blasts—and because of the sparkling hammer in her right hand. Regardless— |
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− | “Excellent. Come roaring into my arms! Yeah, where’s that enemy? Come and—" |
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+ | “Don’t worry. We’ll blast off with you. We promised, didn’t we?” |
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− | '''*****''' |
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+ | “…Brother…always…keeps, his promises… Trust us, okay?” |
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− | "With indomitable resolve, Til would run like hell from the dominant! And Sora would welcome her into his arms—that ultimate safety zone where the Covenants would repel any attempt to pry her loose— |
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+ | —Sora’s and Shiro’s voices intoned from the seat in front of her, joyful but firm. And Til felt them holding her left hand tight. She broke into a smile to realize her trembling had somehow stopped…and she continued with her eyes fixed straight ahead on Veig’s machine, all the way through to the man inside. |
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− | …Yoink, yoink, yoink… |
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+ | “…I hate this country. I hate Hardenfell, I do.” |
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− | Silence arrived as Shiro yanked at Til’s suspenders. Til blushed, and Sora watched adoringly. But just as soon, the silence dissolved with the appearance of one of the enemies Til feared. |
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+ | She reaffirmed her feelings—her belief. This arrogant world told her not to run. This |
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− | @ |
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+ | oppressive world told her not to be ashamed. Til looked up at its tireless way of life and sneered at it. |
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− | "Whyyy…so this is your burrow… What a perfectly grotesque horror showww!” |
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+ | “I love the sky, I do… In this country…the sky is closed off, it is.” |
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− | The sudden visitor continued merrily as if in song: |
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− | |||
− | "It rubs me quite the wrong way. ♥ Why… ♪ this would be a fine time to execute you in a dark ☆ ritual! ♥” |
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+ | The cave’s ceiling reminded her; lost and confused, she’d ended up in this dump before she knew it, and the world asked her, Why did you run? Now, Til knew the feeling of a hand in hers. Now, she knew another world—that of those two. Now, she could say it: |
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− | “Help me! This is the time, it is! Help me! I’ll be burned alive, I—ow! Q-Q-Queen Shiro, pardon me, if you will! I-I’m safe here, I am; I’ve successfully escaped, I have!!” |
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+ | Ah…there never was a place for me here. |
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− | Smiling, Fiel announced Til’s imminent slaughter. Til fell on her face, probably due to having her suspenders pulled, before crawling into Shiro’s skirt. Sora looked behind, unimpressed with Til’s shaky-voiced declaration of victory. |
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+ | —Screw this place—!! |
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− | “…? Oh, I apologize for the wait, Masters. But I have returned.” |
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+ | So—! |
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− | “Yeah… Good work, Jibril… So, sorry to spring this on you right away, but…" |
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+ | “I also hate the chieftain of this country. I hate you, I do…!” |
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− | The devil angel, back with the Elven menace, stood there confused. |
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+ | The hammer sparkled ever brighter as Til’s words spilled out uncontrollably, with the pain that burned her up. What came back was a lonely, sorrowful chuckle. Til ground her teeth. |
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− | Til and Fiel had averred that they would die were they to breathe the same air for six hours in the subterrane. So the agreement had been made that Jibril would go back to pick up Chlammy and Fiel after they got to Hardenfell. Sora praised Jibril and clutched his head again. |
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+ | …She’d known—no, she’d had a hunch—that he’d say that. What he was saying. As if it was everything— |
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− | “…This isn’t even on the level of ‘they don’t get along’…" |
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+ | '''“I hate that…how everything’s just as you expected… I hate iiit!!”''' |
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− | @ |
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+ | Her voice impulsively swelled with the pain that only grew: |
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− | '''*****''' |
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+ | '''“I hate how you act like you’re so great, I do! I hate even more that you actually are, I do!!”''' |
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− | "Heh-heh-heh, yes, heh, I say! I can’t see anything, I can’t! Even if you glare at me, I—I won’t be scared, I won’t! You might as well craft a spell to hurt me and watch the Covenants turn it to mist, you might! ***Pft!***" |
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+ | The dam had burst, and her feelings could no longer be contained. |
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− | '''*****''' |
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+ | “I hate how you advertise yourself as a genius, I do! I hate how I can’t argue because you actually are a genius, I do!! I hate how you look down on me, I do! I hate so much that it’s only natural because you’re above me, I do!! I hate how you’re so hairy!! You shaved too much, you say?! So what? Are you trying to rub it in? I wish you’d go to hell, I do!! I hate you, I hate you, I hate you—U-Uncle, you’re a pervert!! I hate you very, very, veeery much, I do!!” |
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− | "Fi!! Come on, Fi, don’t make that face; it’s scary! Please…” |
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+ | «Whoa!! Come on, stop already or I’m really gonna cry! Goddamn!» |
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− | Her head buried beneath Shiro’s skirt, her bottom showing, her body trembling, Til taunted Fiel all the same. Fiel’s face was such a storm of silent bloodthirst, it ultimately made Chlammy cry. Shiro grudgingly bore the situation as the alternative to having Til in Sora’s arms. All present looked to Jibril for an explanation. |
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+ | The momentum had flushed out everything Til wanted to say. Inattentive to the tearful begging over the comm system, Til caught her breath. As the shaking of the stage and the sparkling of her hammer and her pain all grew in speed, she wiped her tears. With a sharp, firm voice, she mulled over her words carefully and gave her answer: |
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− | “Perhaps owing to the influence of their creator, Dwarves believe that everything exists to be forged.” |
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+ | “I hate you. That’s why I run. If that’s not enough for you to understand—” |
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− | She gestured toward the light at the center of the city—the Holy Forge. |
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+ | Then in the spirit of the game: |
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− | “And with the fire of Ocain, god of the forge, they are capable of melting anything." |
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+ | “—I’ll sock it to you like this—and then I think you will understand, I do.” |
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− | …Hmm, quite a radical line of thought. Sora nodded. Everything existed to be forged—so the world existed to be rebuilt. To the Dwarves with their all-melting furnace, the environment was made to be destroyed. Meanwhile… |
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+ | Yes—seeing behind her eyelids the place the feeling of those two had taken her as they held her left hand, that black sky with a white bird, Til laid down the gauntlet sonorously. |
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− | “Why, rocks cave, trees fall, rivers dry up in their wake. The very mountains collapse.” |
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+ | “I fled to win—to honor my promise, I did.” |
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− | —And the wind? And the sky? Sora, Shiro, and even Chlammy wisecracked to themselves as they listened to Fiel. |
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+ | …A tactical withdrawal was made when one had a chance of victory… She had been just lost, but now it would be redefined—no. Each time another explosion went off, the spirits converged into her hammer, and it was that pain. |
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− | “The seasons dieee, and the homes of the Elves—naturally!—die as well…” |
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+ | And now it had been redefined—!! |
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− | And as they started to hear the rumbling of intent to kill, Sora and Shiro finally understood. |
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+ | That pain had turned her conviction into that of the past. Til savagely swung her hammer as she— |
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− | @ |
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+ | —bellowed forth her soul with the stirring of a power beyond all normal conception throughout the venue. |
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− | "Why, to exterminate such vicious beasts…is the natural obligation of every intelligent being. ♥” |
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+ | '''“I fled for the sake of this day, when I’d surpass you, I diiid!!”''' |
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− | The polar opposite of the Elves, whose love and hearts died as well, apparently… Even so, Sora asserted that he was not convinced—for indeed—! |
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+ | == Partie 3 == |
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− | '''*****''' |
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+ | It was a power that all feared instinctively. The memories sleeping deep in their blood awakened. An outrageous power of a whole different rank, a whole different status, a whole different order of magnitude—quite literally a different level. The future brought on in the next few moments by this power beyond reason didn’t take someone like Veig to foresee. It was a strike from the heavens that sneered at every one of heaven’s gifts crawling atop the earth, judging them likewise of null value. No one could mistake that power. It was |
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− | "You both destroyed the environment on a planetary scale in the Great War! Who are you to talk?!" |
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+ | a Heavenly Smite…… |
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− | '''*****''' |
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+ | “Hey, whoaaa! I thought the Flügel wasn’t—hey, isn’t that against the rules?!” |
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− | It was thousands of years too late to be saying that—!! Sora and Shiro couldn’t swallow this however they tried. But at Jibril’s next words— |
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+ | From his machine—his cockpit—Veig screeched, blanching. Someone who wasn’t in the game—with magic that wasn’t even a seal rite!! His one eye searched in a panic for the Flügel, but in the next moment— |
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− | “It is a matter of the length of their feud, I suppose. Masters? Please observe the forehead of that long-ears. Do you see something? ♥” |
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+ | —he realized that the center of the crawling power…was Til’s hammer. And his one eye was opened by the roar over the comm system and the unheard-of shock that followed… Yes: |
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− | —they froze like stone. In Fiel’s forehead…there were gems—minerals. Sweat ran down their cheeks. |
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+ | '''«Ultra-large-scale spirit-arm expansion—connect all!! Ariiiise!!!»''' |
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− | —Everything exists to be forged… |
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+ | Til’s face wrenched in agony as she brought down the hammer. There was a flash as it bore through the cockpit…and through the plant below. With that, there came a moment of silence to the blast-stricken venue. And then… |
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− | They didn’t know exactly what those gems were. But it was easy to imagine that it would be problematic for them to be mined. |
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+ | “—?!!” |
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− | "As the Elves have butchered the Dwarves for destroying their forests, so have the Dwarves massacred the Elves for their gems…” |
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+ | …a vertical oscillation unlike anything that had gone before tossed them. A heavy shock came from behind Veig. He dodged instinctively on the spot, but from the mass of metal that had only grazed him flowed a tempestuous soul. |
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− | No one knew by now which happened first, but in any case… |
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+ | '''……''' |
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− | “They have slaughtered each other since the beginning of time, altogether apart from squabbles over the One True God.♥” |
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+ | '''A girl who wanted to imagine things that could not be imagined. A girl who wanted to fly though by no effort could she fly. Saying she could do nothing, she chased the bird in the sky for which there was nothing to do…''' |
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− | '''*****''' |
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+ | '''They said she was just running. They mocked that it was impossible. Her soul…''' |
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− | “It’s your fault for being born with stones in your head, it is. If you’ve a complaint, then come back as a liquid instead. ***Pft!*** That’s right, I won’t apologize, I won’t!! I’ll never apologize to a little weed, I won’t!!” |
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+ | «I…knew it! …I knew it!! Better than anyone, I did…!!» |
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− | '''*****''' |
||
+ | The transmission helped Veig crawl back to reality. But another—no, ten more—no, a hundred, a thousand, ten thousand—innumerable storms of metal whipped through the stage and assaulted his unit like squalls. |
||
− | “…Nooo, nooo… Fi’s ignorrring me… Waaaaaah!!" |
||
+ | Just scraps, they hadn’t much in the way of force or even speed. But every time the fierce soul contained in them scratched by his frame, it left residue. As Til’s voice, wheezing in agony, continued to come through, it pounded at Veig’s will, hard, so hard— |
||
− | @ |
||
+ | «So…you wanted me to live like you…? Fa-kew!!» |
||
− | "—Ah! Wh-why, no! I wasn’t ignoring you, Chlammyyy, I was just a bit—” |
||
+ | To live like them. Like a Dwarf. Without giving up. Without going astray or tiring. To try to overcome natural gifts. To live without shame or retreat. Indeed… Putting themselves on pedestals, though they couldn’t overcome Veig!! Looking as if they understood, talking as if they knew!! They’d called her rubbish, and then!! They’d all said it. They’d basically said this… |
||
− | “Nooo! I don’t like iiit! Eegh… You’re scary, Fi. I hate you!!” |
||
+ | —Everyone else is doing it, so you should, too. |
||
− | Til’s trolling had made Fiel’s malice explode again, which then brought Chlammy’s fear to the breaking point, it seemed. Fiel apologized in a panic to the wailing Chlammy, who’d regressed to the state of an infant… |
||
+ | —You can dream you’ll be rewarded. Just do it— |
||
− | At all this, Sora just sighed. He gave up and decided to dismiss it. |
||
+ | —just shut up and do your work!!— |
||
− | This is beyond reconciliation or resolution… |
||
+ | «I don’t like a world that tells me what to do… I hate it, I do!!» |
||
− | “’Kay. So, will you take us to our customer who wants his medicine?” |
||
+ | I’ll never give in… |
||
− | He looked back at the multilayered, antigravity, omnidirectional factory-type city as he spoke. |
||
+ | I’ll overcome the chieftain and destroy those dictates—!! |
||
− | Actually, to be precise, by now Sora’s eyes were only on the Dwarves who bustled about the city. To be more precise: only the females. Yes…the brown Loli monster girls—!! As he asked Til where to find the customer who would sell them to him, not knowing even which way was up… |
||
+ | I’ll use measuring instruments and Elven theory. I’ll use anything to find a different way! |
||
− | “By the way, you might want to get out of there…before Shiro goes ballistic on your ass.” |
||
+ | I’ll show him… So she thought… |
||
− | …Sora advised Til, who’d been squawking away with her head beneath Shiro’s skirt. Til responded promptly. |
||
+ | «But…no matter what I did…I just…couldn’t find anything!!» |
||
− | “ — Wha? Wha?! I-it was a brief lapse, but I do apologize, I do!!” |
||
+ | Just piling up failures. Bathed in error, lost, confused, making one mistake after another. At last surrendering to a false resignation, as paradoxical as ever. Unable to say anything in return… At some point…she came to think she’d forgotten those feelings, and just wandered, pathetically. |
||
− | “……There’s…a limit…to how, rude…you can…be……isn’t there?” |
||
+ | «…But—hee-hee… Now I know what to say—I do…» |
||
− | Til’s shoulders bounced up as she scrambled to her feet with a salute. Which meant… |
||
+ | Weeping, sobbing, yet the two souls grinned. At last Veig realized the true nature of the maelstrom of metal pounding his unit. And for the first time in his life, he said, It couldn’t be—he doubted his own intuition. |
||
− | @ |
||
+ | “……Hey… Ho. I must be hallucinating, ain’t I?” |
||
− | …Her skirt—Shiro’s—went up, too. Dazzled by the sight of her panties, belly button, and smile, Sora and Til froze. |
||
+ | He saw the whirlwind of metal converging. Not the ground shaking, but the stage moving. Not the metal flying, but just gathering. The parts, the catalysts were joining and coupling and assembling. The majestic waste disposal site was rising as one. The stage itself was wakening—and standing up. That was his impression. It was confirmed by Til’s announcement to everyone watching in Hardenfell, I’ll tell you, and the thing that towered before his eyes—a thing inconceivably gargantuan. |
||
− | “…The little sister…role’s, not…enough, huh? …Now you want…to be the protag…?” |
||
+ | «You forge ahead without shame…as you will—but I, too…will do as I will, I will!!» |
||
− | The smiling Shiro was looking just as ballistic as Sora had feared. He could read between the lines. |
||
+ | She’d led a life of shame—failing, contradicting herself, getting lost without end. Today, this moment, was what it had all been for, and for that she was proud. She trumpeted to all the world that had rejected her, just as they were taught: |
||
− | “…You think, you can get away with…being an accidental perv…if you’re not even, the main character…?” |
||
+ | '''«Shut up!! Your stupid world can eat shit, it can!! Pft!»''' |
||
− | I see, so you want to be crushed, do you? Very well, I’ll grant your wish. |
||
+ | Having asserted her freedom to rebel, the girl crumpled. The siblings embraced her and kept her from falling. Veig gaped at last. |
||
− | '''*****''' |
||
+ | It wasn’t from finally observing the giant object towering over him. It was the girl held by the siblings in the now-empty cockpit at the top…the girl weeping tears of heartfelt joy that she was not alone—a girl beyond his knowledge, who looked down at a bird from heights beyond its knowledge…with a dazzling smile…beyond all knowledge. |
||
− | Alll right, Til!! Let’s hurry and get to Hardenfell and get back!! Okay?! |
||
+ | «…Uncle, did you…ever imagine…this…?» |
||
− | '''*****''' |
||
+ | She asked him whether this was a sight that effort and sensibility could get to—and that moment, a torrent of violence descended upon Veig’s unit… |
||
− | "Sir!! I-I’ll escort you to the Chieftain’s Hall immediately! B-but I won’t see the chieftain, I won’t. I-I’ll wait nearby, if I may…!!” |
||
+ | == Partie 4 == |
||
− | Sora shouted at Til in the hope of hurrying her and avoiding an unmanageable situation this time. Til saluted, while sticking to her guns on that one point. She closed her coat up to her head—once more in backpack form—and said as if reassuring herself: |
||
+ | Neither Veig nor any of the Dwarves watching through all of Hardenfell had ever imagined it, most likely. However, aside from Dwarves…the three who were watching at Til’s hideout did not seem all that surprised. Their eyes still on the monitor, they spoke admiringly… |
||
− | “…It—it’s all right. I’ll go back home; this is just a trip…it is…" |
||
+ | “…Wow… A city can walk, can it…? Oh, is that also a spirit arm?” |
||
− | Mumbling, she walked ahead with heavy steps. Following, Sora felt— |
||
+ | “To be more precise, it is a spirit-arm expansion connected to her hammer, on which she engraved my one-percent Heavenly Smite.” |
||
− | —a sense of déjà vu at this one who so hated her own country. |
||
+ | “Observation: Height 9,700 meters. Length 74,200 meters. Cannon count 982. Definition: High-maneuver fortress class. Evidence of brilliance of Master. Excessive. Zero maturity. This unit loves that part of him, too… Blush.” |
||
− | “…Hey… Why do you hate Hardenfell so much?” |
||
+ | Steph knew those siblings… She’d imagined they’d do something unimaginable. No, she’d known it. So she watched the screen with a sense of resignation, as a shadow desperately ran from the storm falling from the mountain of steel… |
||
− | “Heh… There’s no place for a grubby mole among Dwarves, there’s not.” |
||
+ | == Partie 5 == |
||
− | She sounded just as she had when they first met, when she called herself a “grubby mole of a travesty of a Dwarf.” She seemed to sense the doubt of Sora and Shiro behind her. |
||
+ | At the venue, rain fell from the heap of scrap—torrential rain deep underground where there was no sky. Each drop sliced the wind, pierced the ground, and created a deeper depth below the bottom. |
||
− | @ |
||
+ | “What a little man you are, Veig!! You talk big, but you’re the one who’s smaaaall!!” |
||
− | " …We’re going through anyway, we are. I’ll introduce you to the Central Industrial District, I shall.” |
||
+ | It was a hailstorm of scrap that accompanied the raucous laughter. |
||
− | A picture is worth a thousand words. You’ll see. The ironic smile with which she turned made clear enough what she meant. And then: |
||
+ | “You called this stage our hunting grounds?! What puny thoughts—what a tiny imagination!! As would be expected from someone so small-minded as to only appreciate big boobs—ah, it’s a veritable microcosm of your life!!” |
||
− | “…Sir and Ma’am, do you like this city?” |
||
+ | “…You said…we could use any machines…and do anything with the venue, didn’t you?♪” |
||
− | …… |
||
+ | Towering with a sneer on top was a giant mecha of junk—of the unwanted. Of unvalued failures and rejected scrap. |
||
− | “To me…the capital is the worst part of Hardenfell, it is.” |
||
+ | This was the gathering place for the things that might have not been mistakes. This was their home turf, they indicated with a sneer. |
||
− | Til looked up at the lights like dazzling stars throughout the spherical underground city. The light shone in her orichalcum eyes—but she dropped her gaze as if she were staring beyond the horizon. |
||
+ | “Who’s gonna take the time to hunt their prey after they’ve already lured them in?” |
||
− | “ — There is no sky here……” |
||
+ | Sora uproariously exposed the truth that was now assaulting Veig. |
||
− | Til managed a fragile smile as she looked at the dark sky reflected in the dark-haired Sora’s eyes. Sora chuckled—Yeah, you’re right… |
||
+ | “If you’re gonna lure in your prey, obviously you’re gonna go straight to a trap, aren’t you, you scrub?!” |
||
− | == Partie 2 == |
||
+ | It was a cage, a trap. The junk itself, the venue itself, the soul of a girl who had patched failure to error itself— |
||
− | The Central Industrial District buzzed with noise and machines and Dwarves...and manufacturing plants. Sora and Shiro witnessed an answer to a question they’d long had for fantasy works: Why is magic the opposite of science? |
||
+ | '''“Ladies and gentlemen—the venue itself is our machine!! How do you like that?!”''' |
||
− | What is science? |
||
+ | '''“…We of Blank call it…the Spirit of Mother Til…♪”''' |
||
− | It is a system of records of observation of natural phenomena, inference of laws, and verification by testing. If one could observe magic, spirits, souls, or even gods as natural phenomena, then one could research them systematically. And if the results were reproducible, then wasn’t that totally science? Wasn’t it just one more scientific discipline, like physics or mathematics?! Spiritology!! And now we were talking about machines— devices that behave in specified ways according to theoretical laws. Who cared if they ran on steam, electricity, spirits, or what?! Wasn’t it science |
||
− | regardless of the power source?! Yeah...that’s what they’d thought...but… |
||
+ | It literally looked down on Veig, nine hundred seventy times his size. Sora and Shiro cackled, back at the reins for their big counterattack. |
||
− | “Now!! It’s time for a demonstration of some simple spirit-arm manufacturing, easy for any Dwarf to handle, it is!!” |
||
+ | —Come, O ye who declare yourselves infallible, those of the righteous world. Now our patchwork heap shall speak with iron and lightning and fire to test our Mother’s spirit. We shall now question the refuse that you have shorn away and discarded in your quest to forge. We ask: On what grounds did you reject us—?! |
||
− | ...Sora’s eyes were already glazing over at this complete collection of advertising phrases that had never been associated with anything that was actually simple. Til shouted over the work noise and gestured below them. They were on an overpass, looking down at a massive manufacturing site… Yes... |
||
+ | “Personally, I’m not as into the NEXTs as the Arms Forts built by average schmucks to confront them.” |
||
− | @@@ |
||
+ | In fiction, raw size is destined to be overthrown. |
||
− | “First! You just need some ordinary Dwarves and an appropriate amount of materials, you do!!” |
||
+ | Which is how we know that reality is different!! Indeed—!! |
||
− | ...Slapped in the face from the first line, Sora and Shiro looked like they were already done with this. They watched a buff fluffball pick up a huge mass of metal as if it were nothing. Ordinary, my ass. And then: |
||
+ | '''“Raw mass is the secret to defeating genius, biiitch!! We haven’t designed this bullet hell with any place to hide! You trap ’em and smash ’em with sheer numbers! There’s no better tactic!! All you gotta do is win, baby, win!!”''' |
||
− | “Next, you just bash it with a hammer! Do it in the way you feel is best— and there you go!!” |
||
+ | In reality—overkill is all the better!! |
||
− | There was a blast as if someone had gotten frustrated, shoved a whole bunch of charges into a rock mass, and ignited them all at once. |
||
+ | Seated in the cockpit, Sora and Shiro controlled the massive body and filled the screen with projectiles. |
||
− | “...Yeah? So...what’s that?” |
||
+ | «The fock?! How’d you get such a crazy machine?!» |
||
− | “It’s a spirit arm, it is. See? Simple, isn’t it?” |
||
+ | Veig screeched as he just barely managed to demi-shift from one empty location to another. |
||
− | “......I don’t, like this... My, head hurts…” |
||
+ | «What kinda Dwarf has the power to run a barmy monster like that?!» |
||
− | Before they knew it, the buff fluffball had in his hand a mysterious machine—reportedly a spirit arm. It was as if they’d cut straight to the end. This was reality. Shiro crouched and held her head. Sora pressed on his temple and took a deep breath before asking Jibril: |
||
+ | Between that and the Heavenly Strike, Veig was sure now there were some spirits involved far outside the regulations. He raged at their perceived violation of the rules. |
||
− | “Okay... Now show us the raw footage in slow motion. With voice-over, if possible.” |
||
+ | ……Ha. His opponents laughed in unison. They knew it: Dwarves were the perfect negative examples. After all, they were just half-right. Just as he guessed that the stage itself was their machine, but that wasn’t even close to enough. On Sora’s lap sat Shiro—and on her lap sat a girl whose face was scrunched in pain, but who still sneered with fearless irony— |
||
− | “Master, I’m afraid it’s just as it looks. Dwarves are exceedingly dexterous.” |
||
+ | “Chieftain… You ask that now? I couldn’t even start up our first machine without boosting, I couldn’t.” |
||
− | “...Mm... Can’t even see! ...I don’t get it, but...okay?!” |
||
+ | It seemed he had still overlooked the trick in Shiro’s arms. Yes, it was the murmuring of Til, the real trick, most impossible of all— |
||
− | “I’m asking you to explain this crazy bullshit, okay?! Don’t tell me—” |
||
+ | “To begin with…I can’t even use magic without boosting, I can’t.” |
||
− | Having gone over it, there was just one thing Sora had learned, and he asked to confirm: |
||
+ | «—Huhhh?!» |
||
− | “You’re saying they grab a lump of metal ten times as big as they are, hack at it, bash away at it—and then—” |
||
+ | —that made Veig cry out in long-delayed recognition. Sora chuckled. Yes, a Dwarf so great as Veig probably couldn’t have imagined such a trick. Til, by nature, couldn’t even use magic, much less operate a supermassive spirit arm. For Til— |
||
− | Eyes wide open, his head shaking side to side, he screamed—! |
||
+ | '''—WAS AS SMOOTH AS DOLPHIN—!!!''' |
||
− | *** |
||
− | “—boom, you have a mechanical ball? There’s only so far ‘dexterous’ will take you!!” |
||
− | *** |
||
+ | Dwarves used catalysts because of the spiritual overload caused by their mithril—to synchronize externally. But Til didn’t have that mithril!! She wasn’t subject to such overload, or even load for that matter!! That was why she used boosting… Yes…the hidden truth that astonished Jibril when Til used her shift. Til couldn’t use magic without boosting. Conversely, that meant she could if she used boosting… |
||
− | “...Not just a ball...it’s, almost a perfect sphere! ...The precision...is on the level, of a prototype for measurement...!” |
||
+ | …It meant she could use boosting. For example: She could chain boost to boost on the chain reaction of explosions of the huge number of demi-shift anchors they’d planted, funnel the spirits into her hammer on which she’d engraved a Rite of Heavenly Smiting, and synchronize it into her body! With the vast amount of spirits thus summoned under her control, she could operate this leviathan assemblage of parts, this scrap on the stage on which she’d engraved seal rites…!! |
||
− | The object in the fluffball’s hand, according to Til, was a spirit arm. |
||
+ | … Yes, if a normal Dwarf tried this, they’d blow right up. It would be impossible and meaningless. Just as Til said, it would be as perverse an idea as building an underwater breathing apparatus for a fish. But for such an abnormal dwarf, it was both possible and essential. For Til— |
||
− | This spirit arm had been transformed from a metal mass to debris to a machine that operated as intricately as a gyrocompass. It had been finely engraved and gave off the luster of a mirrored surface. |
||
+ | '''—WAS AS SMOOTH AS DOLPHIN—!!!''' |
||
− | @@@ |
||
+ | «Wha—? Wait, whoa— Niecey, don’t tell me yours still hasn’t growwwn?!» |
||
+ | “Heh…heh-heh, Ch-Chieftain…I’d like to see you burn in hell! I would…” |
||
− | “I mean, how is it possible to turn a single piece of metal into a machine with multiple interlocking parts?!” |
||
+ | Listening to their exchange, Sora, to be honest, was fairly sure by now this was not the case. But he still insisted: they had to be talking about beards!! So anyway—! |
||
− | Cast it. Cut it... At least assemble it! What? They just mash the material arbitrarily? They pound it and bend it and fold it, and then there’s a seal-rite machine—a complete spirit arm? |
||
+ | “Heh, this is the difference in natural gifts… Bow before the absolute wall you cannot overcome, Veig!!” |
||
− | At least drill it !!! |
||
+ | «Fock!! How can a Dwarf’s body endure that shite? You wanna kill my fockin’ niece?!» |
||
− | They’re “seal rites” as in engraved seals, right? So engrave them! At least do what the name says!! |
||
+ | The transmission to Sora roared full of naked rage. Understandable. One percent of Jibril’s power—the power to run a supermassive machine like that—was as reckless as pouring rocket fuel into an automobile. Therefore… |
||
− | “...Hey, you’re not telling me they made the subterrane and this whole mechanical city this way, are you?” |
||
+ | “…Didn’t you say no mercy? A man’s word isn’t worth much these days, huh?” |
||
− | Sora was flummoxed. Jibril replied with a correction. |
||
+ | «—!!» |
||
− | “Oh, no, Master. Spirit arms are implemented by connecting catalysts that have had seal rites applied, combining them, and synchronizing spirits and souls with the cores. Ultimately, they are driven by the magic of an individual Dwarf, the spirits of the caster.” |
||
+ | …Sora saw that Veig was thinking of taking a bullet and losing the game for Til’s sake, and Sora stopped him, making a face. If Til died, it would probably spell death for Sora and Shiro, who were holding her, too. Til was barely conscious, but still she held firm to her hammer and smiled. |
||
− | “Yes, yes! Typical machines... Oh, look over there. They’re building an airship, they are.” |
||
+ | —Veig meant to lose intentionally. |
||
− | They turned their eyes to the section of the plant Til pointed to. A fluffball who’d crossed his arms in front of a huge bulk of material, shouted “Rahhh!” and smashed it like a karate master would to a stack of tiles! And then— somehow!—before their eyes, the material turned into an organic-looking |
||
− | drive furnace. Then, with the sense of satisfaction at a job well done, the Dwarf lifted it up like a barbell. |
||
+ | This man didn’t seem to understand what a humiliation that would be—!! |
||
− | “Now! Another Dwarf who’s made another part as seems best takes that part—” |
||
+ | “To hell with your patronizing sympathy!! This is a trap—there’s no place for you to hide and no room for you to choose!!” |
||
− | The fluffball tossed the drive furnace to another fluffball, who caught it with his hands— |
||
+ | Sora’s howl what seemed like a signal to that which sat somewhere in the supermassive machine behind the giant cannon that opened its mouth with a roar: another machine. Sora and the operator inside the additional cockpit announced savagely: |
||
− | “And thus they put together parts as they see fit until they have an airship, they do. And there you have it, you do!!” |
||
+ | “There’s only one future: Til’s complete victory!!” |
||
− | —Steadily. At blinding speed. Tossing and heaving... Various units flew through the air and piled up on one another, connecting as they hit each other, unfolding, coupling. It seemed as if a massive structure was forming all by itself. This was unwatchable. |
||
+ | «Whyyy, it’s time for the showwwdowwwn.♥» |
||
− | @@@ |
||
+ | That moment, the light of the Holy Forge flashed from the barrel, and suddenly a metal glob blocked the opening. Connected to the muzzle, the object sparkled—and this time, Veig froze, mech and all. It was another legacy of the past that he could not mistake. |
||
− | *** |
||
− | “Other than the seal-rite stuff, isn’t this exactly the saaame?!” |
||
− | *** |
||
+ | “Can you dodge a bomb? If you know a way, as a gamer, I’d very much like to know!” |
||
− | ...Okay. So basically, it was magical bullshit. Time to let it go. Even as Sora relaxed, his face sculpted into an archaic smile, the airship kept coming together—but there was no need to trouble oneself over how this insult to aerodynamics could fly. If you wanted to start that, what about Jibril? Screw it. It’s magic. But it was a machine—so screw you, Sora roared with the baneful visage of an Asura! |
||
+ | A bomb indeed, leaving no place to hide. A bomb called…yes, that’s right: |
||
− | “Look—where are the blueprints?! Where are the measuring instruments?! Where are the tools other than hammers?!” |
||
+ | …The E-bomb… |
||
− | A machine—a device that behaved in specific ways according to theoretical laws... Sora demanded to know what had become of the design documents, the engineering logic...in short, the theory. Til’s voice rang out to reveal to him the quintessence of this advanced civilization. |
||
+ | == Partie 6 == |
||
− | “Sir!! If you ask what the secret of Dwarven mechanical engineering and magical theory is, there is only one answer, there is!!” |
||
+ | In the cockpit behind the blazing E-bomb was Fiel, smiling. |
||
− | *** |
||
− | “‘DON’T THINK, FEEL!’ IT IIIIIIIIS !!” |
||
+ | “Why, you’ll note that we’ve followed the rules to a T. And in a most sustainable way, if I might add.♥” |
||
− | “HOW CAN YOU HAVE ENGINEERING OR THEORY IF YOU REJECT THINKING ?! ARE YOU SCREWING WITH ME ?!” |
||
− | *** |
||
+ | No magic other than seal rites. You lost if your core broke. And the players here were everyone… |
||
− | —Don’t worry about all that theoretical crap. Use your common sense!! |
||
+ | “Anyone can very well recycle the unit we lost in, caaan’t theyyy?♥” |
||
− | Sora gasped under the weight of this unheard-of absurdity. But Jibril kneeled and told him for the third time: |
||
+ | True, Til could connect and use Fiel’s unit. Also: |
||
− | “Master, I apologize for not explaining sufficiently... Dwarves are exceedingly dexterous.” |
||
+ | “Incluuuding the seal of protection of that boorish fire, and incluuuding the seal rites on the unit.♪” |
||
− | No matter how he begged for an explanation, that was the only answer she could give. And there was a reason for that. |
||
+ | Fiel had in mind the seventh player, and their fifth trump card. |
||
− | “I can see it, but I cannot understand it myself. I speculate that they themselves would be unable to explain it.” |
||
+ | They hadn’t bothered with any seal rites for the specs, but they had bothered with seal rites. |
||
− | Sora felt the blood drain from his face, as Shiro felt it drain from hers as she crouched trying to do calculations. So Jibril was saying that Dwarves fundamentally… |
||
+ | They had implemented an eighty-four-fold rite using the seal of protection of an Old Deus. And they’d used the Holy Forge, the power of Ocain, to enable shifting. |
||
− | “Dwarves: the race created by Ocain, god of the forge.” |
||
+ | Til had subsumed Fiel’s unit and commandeered it under the protection of Ocain. And there was no rule that Til couldn’t use that thing shifted from her hideout!! Chlammy asked suspiciously of the merry Fiel, who occupied the same cockpit: |
||
− | @@@ |
||
+ | “…Fi, I’ve been wondering: Whose idea was it to use the seal of Ocain’s protection?” |
||
− | It was like asking the Flügel, created by the god of war, how they could fight so well. If one were to ask the Dwarves, created by the god of the forge, how they could forge so well— |
||
+ | She’d heard of the “rites of spirit-breaking” or whatever that they’d used in the War, such as Áka Si Anse—spells that used seal rites to call upon the protection of Kainas, creator of the Elves. But it was said they were no longer usable after the Ten Covenants. In that case, this thing Fiel produced must have been newly compiled, after the War. |
||
− | “All they need is their natural gifts—no, their god-given sensibility—to manufacture anything.” |
||
+ | …Who would have implemented a seal rite to call upon Ocain, of all gods? For that matter, even having grown up in Elven Gard, Chlammy had never heard of a spell that could un-quasi-shift such a large mass. |
||
− | —one’s question would be answered with a question: How can’t you? |
||
+ | “Mmm, I don’t know, myself. It’s been the Nirvalens’ ace in the hole for generations.” |
||
− | “They imagine what they fancy and move as they please—drawing their ideal ever nearer through pure sensibility.” |
||
+ | Fiel tilted her head. Yes, and they’d said this… |
||
− | Sora and Shiro gulped as the answer got shoved down their throats. |
||
+ | “They said trump cards are trump cards because you don’t reveal them until the showdown.” |
||
− | “And as a result, they never fail... They are a race without need for hypotheses or testing.” |
||
− | So it was just that they were preternaturally talented... No. Straight-up geniuses—monsters of sensibility. All they had to do was move their hands the way their imagination told them to, and creation would occur spontaneously. If they’d built this civilization all out of flashes of inspiration and casual tweaks, then they didn’t need theory. Trial with no error. Testing with no failure... |
||
+ | Howeverrr… She gave Chlammy her greatest smile as she continued. |
||
− | “...A mechanical civilization that’s progressed by passing down knowledge and experience by sensibility alone...huh...” |
||
+ | “Why, my ultimate trump card is you, Chlammy.♪” |
||
− | Having finally got the big picture, Sora and Shiro looked at each other and nodded deeply. |
||
+ | Fiel had gone to such lengths as to reveal her family’s secret. She smiled at her best friend: They had lost—and that therefore was the victory planned. Chlammy beamed and reflexively looked away, embarrassed. |
||
− | —IN THAT CASE, THERE’S NO PROBLEM !! |
||
+ | “If you say we can’t win…why, then we can’t win.” |
||
− | “So basically! Dwarves just have an OP buff?” |
||
+ | Yes…from the moment Chlammy had concluded that they couldn’t win… |
||
− | “......Mm! ...If that’s, all it is... Okay... I can live with that…” |
||
+ | …Fiel had resigned from this game… |
||
− | Sora and Shiro powerfully stood up and shook off their confusion. All right, so they have a mechanical civilization that would sneer at science fiction. But this isn’t science fantasy, either. It isn’t science at all. It’s pure fantasy!! So the two of them thought, having at last understood the true meaning of what Jibril had been telling them. |
||
+ | So, they had requested of Sora and Shiro a friendly token of appreciation for their friendly cooperation. It was a condition of the deal, in other words: No matter who won— |
||
− | A mechanical civilization but not a scientific civilization...huh? Ah...now they had their answer as to the difference between science and magic. |
||
+ | —Veig must be commanded to bear shame for the rest of his life… |
||
− | @@@ |
||
+ | “Whyyy, it doesn’t matter what you do as long as you win!! Our objective is to convict that thing, the offender! In which caaase, it doesn’t maaatter who uses whose power to win. As long as the crook gets his just deserts, we have wooon!!” |
||
− | —Machines without theory... Yes, indeed, that was not science. It was, indeed, magical bullshit !! |
||
+ | Fiel’s bright demeanor made Chlammy chuckle. |
||
− | “Maaan... Why didn’t you just tell us Dwarves were a magical bullshit race?” |
||
+ | “…Well, we do have to regret a little we didn’t make good on our chance to win directly.” |
||
− | “...You could have...saved us...a lot, of...sweating...” |
||
+ | “But we must count ourselves blessed to have been able to pummel you a bit.♪ After allll—” |
||
− | Beaming from ear to ear, Sora and Shiro resumed walking, ready to leave this magical workshop that called itself a manufacturing plant, while the Dwarves carried on their work below. |
||
+ | “Yes. We are really perfect outsiders to this matter. We’re not even friends, you know?” |
||
− | A race of geniuses that advanced technology without theory. So decisively incomprehensible that it was a relief. It’d be more productive to try to understand Flügel or Old Dei, Sora thought with a smirk. They were just fundamentally beyond human understanding—or rather... |
||
+ | As they snidely echoed Veig’s remarks, Chlammy had a thought. |
||
− | ...They were the most dangerous thing to assume you understood. Sora made up his mind about that. As they began to exit the Central Industrial District, Sora and Shiro heard someone mutter behind them. |
||
+ | —They could win an unwinnable match through someone else’s power. Then how might they answer an unanswerable question? |
||
− | “...Why, they’re simply animals not capable of complex thought.” |
||
+ | “We’ll make others answer for us… In other words, as usual, we win through sophistry.” |
||
− | It was Fiel, who’d kept silent for a long while, with a differing opinion about the Dwarves... No, actually, a plain statement without the slightest aggressive intent. She sounded as calm and sure as a Buddha giving a sermon. |
||
+ | —Having had their past questioned: Have you paid your tab? |
||
− | While Chlammy cried—You’re scary, Fi; I don’t like it—Fi’s face, its emotions sealed away by magic, remained as placid as a Buddha’s. |
||
+ | —They answered with their future: I will when I can… |
||
− | “...Fi? Your ‘form is emptiness’ face is kind of scary in its own way...” |
||
+ | …… |
||
− | “Chlammy... You must calm your mind... Why, fear is one of the roots of suffering…” |
||
+ | “…And so the puppet continued building the sky… The sky only they still could not see…” |
||
− | Fiel looked like a Buddha statue, and it only made Chlammy back farther away. |
||
+ | In the cramped cockpit, Chlammy smiled subtly as she gazed upon the sky before her. They’d opened it for her, for Fi, for Jibril, the Werebeasts, the Old Deus, and Ex Machina… And now… |
||
− | “By the way, Master? I hear there is a race that has repeatedly lost to this very thoughtless race.♥” |
||
+ | “They’re opening up Til’s sky… Going on until they find their own…” |
||
− | Jibril looked pleased as punch. |
||
+ | == Partie 7 == |
||
− | “I have also heard that they analyzed the tactics produced by the thoughtless sensibility of this thoughtless race, and systematized them into a set of conventions that just barely allowed them to fight back, both in war and in games— Oh! That reminds me.♪” |
||
+ | At last, brilliant, blinding light. |
||
− | The terrible actor glanced at Fiel. |
||
+ | Til had gathered things from outside—welded them, forged them, patched them together in one wrong way after another. Now her fire melted them all together, and cast them as ingenuity, which she used to reach the sky. |
||
− | @@@ |
||
+ | “…Uncle…have I…kept…my promise…?” |
||
− | “I believe the link tattoos on the arm and forehead of that long-ears do, in fact, stem from a desperate theoretical adaptation of those used without a caaare in the worrrld by the Dwarves. Pardon, was I too harsh?” |
||
+ | The spirits raged, and her body ached as if it was about to break. |
||
− | With the utmost joy, she worked to break the face of that statue—trolling as hard as she could. |
||
+ | “Have I…reached a sky…that no one has seen before?!” |
||
− | “You had to downgrade them so that your long-ears could use them, didn’t you?♥” |
||
+ | The heat threatened to burn out her spirit corridor junction nerves. But alas, Til smiled regardless… |
||
− | “Fi?! That’s a cheap shot! Don’t get mad, please?!” |
||
+ | “…Do you…want…to know…what it’s…like…?!” |
||
− | “...Why would I? A Flügel knows nothing of seals, useless should even one spirit particle be warped. Why, I’d never take to heart the words of one who hasn’t the faintest idea what subtlety is, to say nothing of being able to use seal rites...” |
||
+ | By now, only one thing entered her muddied consciousness: the distant sky Til was sure she’d never imagined, and that no one else ever had—the feeling of floating in a deep, black sky, Veig too far behind to see, uncertain of whether he could hear the voice she wrung out, or even whether it was coming out at all— |
||
− | “Are you sure you’re sealing away your emotion?! Don’t mock her back with that face, that voice!!” |
||
+ | Still, she’d fulfill the promise of that distant day. She’d vowed that she would surpass him—and promised something to the bird of that day. She spelled out the wish she’d held in her heart, that her words, her smile would reach their destination. |
||
− | With that commotion behind them, Sora and Shiro looked at the back of the little figure ahead of them. |
||
+ | '''“You piece of shit, you’ll never understand, you won’t!! Serves you right, it does!! Pft!”''' |
||
− | ...Til had talked about Dwarven craft as if it had nothing to do with her. |
||
+ | «Niecey!! You got to get back at me, huh?! Ain’t ya imitatin’ me?!» |
||
− | They looked at the hammer on the back of that self-described “grubby mole”... |
||
+ | Veig’s transmission came through at trace volume. Til did hear it, though, and she closed her eyes and grinned. |
||
− | “...Yes, yes. I’m sure you’ve realized by now, you have...” |
||
+ | …Please. I’m about to fall under the delusion that I have become a bird, I do. But I know…that it’s just an illusion, I do. By tomorrow, perhaps even by one second in the future, I’ll be made to know |
||
− | Without turning, Til nodded deeply and self-deprecatingly. All right. Dwarf had a crafting cheat. Got that. But when Til had repaired her spirit arm and the subterrane, the way she had done it defied even Sora’s comprehension. That speed the eye couldn’t follow, that inexplicable skill— but what was it...? |
||
+ | Very well then…!! Making mistakes is my only specialty—!! |
||
− | “...I can’t make anything the way the others do.” |
||
+ | —Assuming I can… Assuming that nothing’s impossible! I’ll fail again, and build up my mountain of mistakes, I will!! |
||
− | Til turned with a grin as if revealing the secret to a cheap trick. She bashed her spirit arm into the ground, and it blossomed like a fan with thousands of slats, the slats unfolding into countless tools and measuring instruments. |
||
+ | She’d lose her way, she’d get confused, she’d blunder—and every time, she’d cry and wail and gnash her teeth in vexation! Til would take the long way around like a perfect fool, getting lost repeatedly, pathetically drenched in tears and shame. She might never even know if it had meaning. But there was a sight that could only be seen by taking that foolish path. |
||
− | “...I...don’t have a bit...of that sensibility, I don’t.” |
||
+ | It could never be seen by those born with natural talent…by the birds that didn’t build airplanes. |
||
− | So she was saying... Even with tools, there was nothing she could do in that regard. Til sneered at herself to confirm Sora’s thoughts and continued. |
||
+ | It could never be seen by the birds that had never felt that obsession: I want to fly anyway. There was such an entertaining sight to see, to be found in a place no one imagined. |
||
− | “...Whether it’s this hammer or the subterrane, the best I can do is to fix things or patch them together, it is.” |
||
+ | …I’m ready to make as many mistakes as it takes. I can say that now, I can… |
||
− | @@@ |
||
+ | And so, while Til went limp in Shiro’s arms— |
||
− | Til was supposed to be one of those Dwarves who “never failed.” Sora now understood Jibril’s consternation when Til had blown up her spirit arm. |
||
− | + | “…Well, bet this is news to you smart folks. Here’s the common knowledge of the weak. Listen with gratitude, yeah?!” |
|
+ | —Sora howled at the shell of the E-bomb, which glowed like a star to announce it was ready for blast-off. |
||
− | This civilization had passed down knowledge and experience by natural sensibility. Without that sensibility...there was nothing that could be passed down. |
||
+ | “…Generally speaking, things in the world don’t go the way you imagine…” |
||
− | Sora noticed the way Dwarves looked at Til, her face hidden by her coat... |
||
+ | Just as they had sailed for India and mistakenly arrived in the New World; as they had tried to prove everything with mathematics and mistakenly refuted their mathematics; as they had built rockets to reach the moon and mistakenly dropped them on Earth… |
||
− | —What are you doing here? Their eyes asked her that warily. |
||
+ | …As far as humans were concerned, perfection was a waste of time. They’d mess it up anyway. To seek mere perfection wasn’t going to do it. Therefore—!! |
||
− | “...So do you still need to ask...why I hate Hardenfell?” |
||
+ | “Your thinking is too damn small!! If you want to fly, you’re not gonna have a chance unless you have the guts to go past the damn moon and crash into Mars by mistake!!” |
||
− | Sora and Shiro, Chlammy, even Jibril, all found themselves silent. If what made a Dwarf a Dwarf was that gift—that god-given sensibility—then Til... |
||
+ | Well…yes…? |
||
− | ...of course wouldn’t like it. Nor have a place. |
||
+ | “Even if you get up and down backward, you might be able to go through the planet to the sky at the other side, right?♪” |
||
− | She wasn’t even a Dwarf...from her point of view. She gently brought her face into sight to declare her inferiority. |
||
+ | You might end up with a result better than perfect, right? |
||
− | *** |
||
− | “It’s because I’m a grubby little mole, I am!! Do you understand now?!” |
||
− | *** |
||
+ | «…You fockin’ with me? Shit—» |
||
− | —and sang the triumph of I told you so—!! |
||
+ | A man born with natural talent… A bird that flew by sensibility alone…transmitted back with a sense of awe at the unknown he’d never had before—or not in a long time at least. |
||
− | ......Uhhh...? |
||
+ | Indeed…they couldn’t use the E-bomb. So he didn’t know what it was they were on the verge of launching. He didn’t know what it was to accomplish. He didn’t even know a thing about the heights where his niece floated now. |
||
− | Her glorious mien paradoxically suggested pride. The rest uniformly were without words this time. |
||
+ | But even so! There was one thing he was sure about. He howled with a longing he’d never felt. |
||
− | Til’s heated discourse reminded one that this was the point she was after. But then she walked up to Sora with a smirk that made even Sora nervous and leery, and she went on—!! |
||
+ | «So you’re saying you don’t know what the hell will happen. You’re bloody daft, aren’t ya?!» |
||
− | “Sir?! I have heard that Immanity is a ‘thinking reed’!!” |
||
+ | If it might be the case that Til couldn’t take it—!! That instant, Veig’s unit appeared to get blown away and then vanished from sight. One soul raced forth through the air, with maneuvers uncapturable by Sora’s eyes, or by the venue’s cameras. It left no trace; the unit broken down, it raced past its limits, riding the force of a fist. |
||
− | “Uh, yeah... Someone said that in this world, too, did—” |
||
+ | —I’ll overcome even that— |
||
− | “But an unthinking Immanity is not a reed!! It’s just a moving reed! A pestilent freak of nature just waiting to be blasted with weed killer. At least a real weed stays put, it does!!” |
||
+ | Detecting the single strike to end it, Sora smirked and answered inwardly. |
||
− | Til’s furious invective didn’t even give Sora time to acknowledge her statements. He couldn’t breathe. |
||
+ | —Yeah. That’s right! That’s how we live, as fools incapable of anything but straying and failing and erring. Bet it’s a breath of fresh air for smarty-pants jerks like you who live with all trial and no error, huh? |
||
− | @@@ |
||
+ | What’s gonna happen? How the hell would I know?! |
||
− | “An Immanity that doesn’t think! A Werebeast that doesn’t have keen senses! A Flügel that can’t fight, a Siren that can’t attract, an Ex Machina that doesn’t learn—these are all cases of utter and irredeemable hopelessness, which I would to, here, as I said!!” |
||
+ | “That’s why you gotta test that shit! That’s what we idiots call science!” |
||
− | Til, so impassioned she was losing her command of the Immanity tongue, concluded!! |
||
+ | Sora sneered and activated the contents of the E-bomb in the muzzle, and a moment later Veig unleashed one soulful strike that pierced the shell. |
||
− | *** |
||
− | “There is nothing worse than a Dwarf who doesn’t have sensibility!! This should be self-evident, it shouuuld!!” |
||
− | *** |
||
+ | == Partie 8 == |
||
− | Her words had an echo of thunder quite unlikely in an underground city. |
||
+ | It was a full-on collision of Veig’s and Til’s souls, entangling, stirring, radiating white. No one could tell whose soul it was anymore. Everything raced through the catalysts and through the minds of all present… |
||
− | ......Oh. Must be the factories, Sora hazily realized. Fiel nodded with her Buddha-statue face, while everyone else was simply overwhelmed by the tide of her momentum— |
||
+ | …… |
||
− | “Oh. You weeds who can’t be eaten and can’t be burned should hurry up and rot down into fossil fuels before you start talking, you should. ***Pft!*** No, I won’t apologize, I won’t! I’ll never apologize to a bloody Elf, I won’t!!” |
||
+ | …The man had been born with outstanding sensibilities. Everyone knew him to be a genius. He too knew this, not as a matter of presumption or conceit, but as a proud matter of fact. He swung his hammer without guile, yet with ferocity. To create a work that was better—no, the best. An unprecedented masterpiece. A divine revelation!! He would enter that |
||
− | —But, Elf. I’m not including you here. Her motor-mouthing seemed to have led to Fiel weaving a spell, still with the Buddha-statue face. |
||
+ | realm only one before in the history of Dwarf, his ancestor, had laid eyes on. His eyes reflected the back of that genius who had laid his fingers on creation—the alteration of concepts. He would reach that extreme none had approached in six thousand years. The man who kept piling up successes was the second coming of that sublimity. Everyone was certain he would be the next chieftain. Amidst all this, the man was hurling invective at a strange kid who was following him around: |
||
− | “Heh! You can try to destroy me, but it’s futile, it is; I’m not scared, I’m— waiiit! H-help me! Queen Shiro, please let me in; I was bluffing; I am sooo scared, I am!!” |
||
+ | “Hey… Get lost already, would ya, fockin’ brat?! You’re gettin’ in the way of my work!!” |
||
− | Til tried to flee under Shiro’s skirt again, but that wouldn’t work a second time. She hurried to hide behind Sora and Shiro, where she quivered. Sora— and for some reason Jibril and Fiel, too—frowned at her quizzically. |
||
+ | “I’m not getting in the way, I’m not. I’m seducing my future husband, I am.” |
||
− | “Uh...hey. But, Til...you can build spirit arms...can’t you?” |
||
+ | The one contradicting him as if it was nothing was, at the time, a little girl. The one who called herself his future wife. |
||
− | Til had asserted her inferiority with a fervor going past humility all the way to pride. But... |
||
+ | “If you think I’m getting in your way, that just proves you have feelings for me, doesn’t it, Uncle? Doesn’t it?!” |
||
− | “From our point of view, you’re so skilled it’s bullshit. We can’t even see spir—” |
||
+ | “Niecey, you’re gonna stand there winkin’ and blowin’ kisses at me like some bloody fool? I’ve feelings, harsh feelings!” |
||
− | Sora chose his words to probe out the identity of this unease that had arisen within him but was interrupted. |
||
+ | She was the precocious daughter of one of his older stepsisters, and she’d taken an inexplicable shine to him. |
||
− | “Sir. Immanities cannot fly, they can’t.” |
||
+ | “I ain’t got no interest in some kid who ain’t even got any hair grown in yet—can’t bear to look at ya. Piss off,” he commanded. |
||
− | “.........Well, yeah, we can’t. Sure.” |
||
+ | The child shuddered at the man’s sharp one-eyed glare. |
||
− | @@@ |
||
+ | That was that. Everyone kept their distance from him. His eye had the gift of ending the conversation. Even children always grasped the point that he lived in a different world…until then… |
||
− | Til looked straight at Sora. Her next words, with her pale blue eyes, followed: |
||
− | + | “H-how do you know that I’m smooth?! Have you seen it?!” |
|
+ | But this child shuddered because she suspected he had looked at her naked. Incidentally, this was the fifth time this exchange had occurred. In other words— |
||
− | ...Oh... That’s how it is... |
||
+ | “You peeped on me?! You licked me all over with your eyes, how can I get married now, you should take responsibility, and then I’ll be the wife of the chieftain, what a way to marry up, it is! Come, come, come, Mr. Sir? If you’ll marry me, I can show you my body aaany—” |
||
− | Sora fell silent. Heedless, Til once again took on again a triumphant visage and added, That aside—!! |
||
+ | “I can see from your face you ain’t got no beard, all right?! Don’t blush. Why are ya strippin’?!” |
||
− | “A bird that cannot fly is a chicken, it is! A farm animal! Good only to be cooked to a crisp and deliciously— Wait! I-if I cannot even be deliciously enjoyed, then am I even inferior to a farm animal?! I—I’m afraid I’ve insulted chickens, I have... B-but at any rate!!” |
||
+ | “Ah!! No, I don’t want to be the wife of some pervert who lusts after children, I don’t!!” |
||
− | Til’s speech, resounding ten thousand meters below the surface, seemed to be finally reaching its conclusion. |
||
+ | “Listen to me, will ya?! Wait, didn’t you just say you were seducing me? What do you want?!” |
||
− | “I have no sensibility! I can’t build spirit arms! I can’t even use magic! And as such I’m not even a Dwarf!!” |
||
+ | No matter how he tried to get rid of her, she kept coming. The man clutched his head. |
||
− | Her endless stream of negatives sparked something in Sora. He thought he might be putting a finger on his unease—but then her conclusion crashed his thought process. |
||
+ | —The hell’s with this fockin’ brat? His niece had a strange way with words. But more than anything, it was his own sense of discomfort that confused him. Never having experienced failure or discouragement, the feeling was altogether unfamiliar to him. It would be a while before he realized it was his first experience of anger. |
||
− | *** |
||
− | “Finally, I have no hair!! I’m as smooth as a dolphin!! And therefore: I’m a grubby little mole, I am!!” |
||
+ | “…Listen, Niecey. I’m a fockin’ genius. And that makes me a bloody fine man. You followin’ me?” |
||
− | “Hmm?! I find this a non sequitur! Please elaborate on the implications of this smoothness of yours! |
||
− | *** |
||
+ | “Ah! S-so you mean, when I marry you, I’ll be a fine woman?!” |
||
+ | “Argh, that ain’t it at all. This is the problem. You ain’t good for me, is what I’m sayin’.” |
||
− | Sora turned toward Til so fast the air friction could have lit a match! And — |
||
+ | Back then, he had concluded thus: |
||
− | ...Yoink, yoink, yoink… |
||
+ | “You’ll never be a fine woman.” |
||
− | —his little sister, eyes cold enough to freeze Hell itself, tugged at Til’s suspenders. |
||
− | “...Dolphins...have no hair...on their bodies...and are used, as an analogy...correspondingly...” |
||
− | “Oh, Master? I mentioned that Dwarven females have less hair, but—” |
||
+ | “…Uh-huhhh… What is a fine woman…?” |
||
− | And then, when Jibril added— |
||
+ | “First of all, she’s an adult with hair. You’re out of the question. And she’s a woman who fits me. Let’s see… So first, she has big boobs. And then, if her spirit-arm craft ain’t at least on my level, I ain’t messin’ with that, either. Otherwise, hmm, she’s damn beautiful and damn chaste and damn sexy as far as I’m concerned. That’s what it means to be a fine woman.” |
||
− | “—I only meant in comparison to the males. They are still hairy and bearded, you see.” |
||
+ | “…Uncle, that’s just a fantasy woman, it is.” |
||
− | “Oh, we’re talking about beards?! Of course! I thought she just made a really dramatic revelation and—” |
||
+ | “Rngh?” |
||
− | @@@ |
||
+ | “I-I—I mean, there are no Dwarves with big boobs, there aren’t! And everything after the ‘Otherwise, hmm’ is exactly what my aunts told me virgins fantasize about, it is! Uncle, are you a virgin? By the way, what is a virgin?!” |
||
− | —the females in their party all peered at him as if to ask, What did you think she meant? But Sora said to himself, That’s not the issue here. He looked around the city in a panic and shouted: |
||
+ | “Shut up! What’s wrong with an outta-this-world man wanting an outta-this-world woman? Those fockin’ sisters of mine!!” |
||
− | “Wait... Jibril—did you just say the girls are hairy and bearded? What? Where?!” |
||
+ | And then: |
||
− | Out of nowhere, Jibril had seemed to hint that this Shambhala, its streets filled with brown Loli monster girls going this way and that, was secretly the abyss. |
||
+ | “Heh, you’re hopeless, you are. I’ll just have to become a fine woman for you, I will.” |
||
− | “The mithril hair of Dwarves is an excellent material for spirit amplification.” |
||
+ | ……Suddenly… |
||
− | Oh!! So their hair isn’t silver; it’s mithril. Yeah, she mentioned that! And she said that caused the magic overload that meant they needed catalysts!! But—?! |
||
+ | “In another thirteen, I’ll be an adult, I will. I’ll be downright bushy, I will!! I’ll be beautiful, and oh so chaste, whatever that means, I will! Then you just have to get me sexy, and that’s that, it is!!” |
||
− | Though Sora clung to hope, the answer that came was merciless—and yet, obvious, if you thought about it... |
||
+ | …the child whose pale blue eyes sparkled as she spoke started to feel extremely dissatisfied. |
||
− | “It is used, of course, for catalysts, and also for spirit arms... In fact, it is used in most every machine produced by Dwarf. However, to use it, first one must harvest it... In other words, one must shave.” |
||
+ | “I’ll do my best to make spirit arms like you, I will. If you just give up on the big boobs, I’ll be such a fine woman, right in front of you! And I’ll help you stop being a virgin, I will!!” |
||
− | So, this city—this mechanical civilization so advanced… ...was a Naraka of beard hair... And on top of that... |
||
+ | She smiled as if to ask: So what is a virgin? He thrust back feelings he didn’t understand himself— |
||
− | “The amount of hair Dwarves have indicates the strength of their spiritual amplification and the amount of material they produce. Therefore, males intentionally leave some as a display of power, but since females have less to begin with, they generally shave it all.♪” |
||
+ | “It ain’t happening. Such a good-for-nothin’ ain’t ever gonna get how to make spirit arms.” |
||
− | So the dudes in this abyss were originally fluffballs of a whole different order of magnitude. While even the girls were just shaving their beards. Sora collapsed. |
||
+ | …And that— |
||
− | ...Oh... Oh, god... |
||
+ | was the man’s first misreading… |
||
− | Ocain, god of the forge...Old Deus who did create this race of sensibility...verily, you have no sense at all...!! ***Curse you...*** |
||
+ | “……A good-for-nothing…? …What? You mean me…?” |
||
− | “But...dear me? If you lack hair, then would that not protect you from internal spirit overload due to the mithril and allow you to use magic without catalysts? Is it not advantageous in some ways?” |
||
+ | …What? What’s with those teary eyes like you can’t believe what you just heard?! The man felt ever more uncomfortable. |
||
− | @@@ |
||
+ | “Wh-why nottt? I-I’ll d-do my best, I will.” |
||
− | “It is not, it isn’t!! I don’t have the capability to use magic at all without boosts, I don’t!!” |
||
+ | “Your best ain’t gonna do it…!! Why can’t you see?!” |
||
− | “Y-you mean you have not just less hair, but no hair... You can’t even produce the minimum spiritual amplification required for magic?” |
||
+ | Ah—the child truly didn’t understand. |
||
− | “I cannot, I can’t! But I can accidentally blow up the spirit arms I use for boosting, I can! Without boosts, I can’t use magic, because I have zero hair, I do! And at the same time, I have zero sensibility for making the spirit arms required for boosting, I do!! You may say I should have someone else make them for me, but we’re talking about spirit arms for the hopelessly hairless— it’s as incoherent a request as to make an underwater breathing apparatus for a fish, it is! No one will make such a thing, they won’t!! In conclusion, I’m sunk every which way, I aaam!!” |
||
+ | Dwarf was a race that created exactly what it imagined. But she didn’t see that she didn’t see what he saw. She’d never even imagined she might not have talent. The man stood bewildered as to why that was so uncomfortable for him. |
||
− | Til was announcing checkmate on herself, while Sora meanwhile saw a light at the end of the tunnel. |
||
+ | “…I…I just don’t—understand, I don’t… A-after all…” |
||
− | ...Hopeless? What were these numbskulls talking about? Til, ah, Til alone was not hairy and bearded—!! The One True Brown Legal Loli Monster Girl, was she not?! Sora squinted and stared at the sparkle of hope down at the bottom of the deepest Naraka. |
||
+ | She rebutted between sobs. |
||
− | “...It’s okay... If you, believe...it will grow... ***Grow, growww!”*** |
||
+ | “…Uncle, you don’t understand why I don’t understand, you don’t!” |
||
− | ...Yoink, yoink, yoink... |
||
+ | And at last the man had his answer. |
||
− | Then Sora heard Shiro chant a curse as she repeatedly stretched Til’s suspenders: Die, last hope. However Til interpreted it, Til spoke resolutely with a face reddened by shame—!! |
||
+ | '''“U-Uncle—you can’t overcome the limits of your own imagination, you can’t!!”''' |
||
− | “Heh. From the time I was a child, I looked in the mirror saying, It’ll grow, it will; at least one hair will grow, it will! I believed, I did, for more than seventy years—but not a single strand of peach fuzz grew, it didn’t!! Belief’s made a mockery of me, it has! If you don’t believe me, I’ll show you, I will!! Look at this smooth, hairless—” |
||
+ | “R-really…I’ve already surpassed your imagination, by being unimaginable to you, I have. I’ll make a spirit arm that surpasses you easily… S-see, I’ve won the argument, I have!” |
||
− | “Heyyy, just to check, okay?! You are talking about your ***beard***— righhht?!” |
||
+ | …Indeed…the man himself did not understand the child. He couldn’t imagine what she was thinking, what she was feeling, what…she was crying about… The man she admired over all others had told her she was good for nothing. But she argued against that absolute pronouncement and declared that she’d yet overcome it, weeping and despairing while her eyes burned with blue fire. It was that paradox that baffled the man who never strayed or erred: |
||
− | Til put her hands on her panties with vigor, and with equal enthusiasm, Sora jumped forward and closed up her coat. |
||
+ | …He feared that unimaginable child… |
||
− | —What were you trying to do?! In public! D00d!! |
||
+ | …The man had been born with outstanding sensibilities. They grasped even that divine realm only his ancestor had seen. And thereby he became the first in history to reach the extreme that in over six thousand years no one had been able to approach. |
||
− | Sora’s shoulders heaved, but... |
||
+ | And then? What next? |
||
− | @@@ |
||
+ | The man could only imagine following in the footsteps of his ancestor, but still he had a hunch. Given all this, what was it that his ancestor had seen before he reached this realm? |
||
− | “...Brother... I don’t...have any hair...either...you know...!” |
||
+ | He couldn’t have been a normal Dwarf. He must have been different, something unreadable, incomprehensible, unimaginable… Rather like that well-endowed lady his ancestor was said to have loved…or— |
||
− | “Oh, Master? I don’t—or rather, Flügel in general don’t, either.♥” |
||
− | + | “I—I promise I’ll make a spirit arm that surpasses you, I do.” |
|
+ | —like the paradoxical child declaring this irresolute resolution— |
||
− | “I—I have hair! At least on the peach-fuzz lev— Hey, Sora! I mean, Fi, how could you?!” |
||
+ | “…Arright then. Go make a spirit arm that surpasses mine and bring it back here.” |
||
− | “S-Sir, are you one of those perverts who fancies them smooth and hairless?!” |
||
+ | —to overcome six thousand years of Dwarven stagnation…and the limits of sensibility— |
||
− | “Look, we’re talking about BEARDS, right?! I can see that with my own eyes, and obviously it’s better if you don’t have them!! Guys who are into bearded ladies at the very least aren’t in the majority, right?! Why are you looking at me like that?!” |
||
+ | “I’ll be here waiting for the damn fine woman who can beat me. It’s a promise.” |
||
− | Sora tearfully defended himself against the gazes accusing him of being a pervert. But— |
||
+ | —to become a damn fine woman. |
||
− | “...Sir. As you’ve seen, I’ve no place to go back to here, I’ve not.” |
||
+ | The man and the child joined pinkies in a solemn oath. He didn’t understand what was meant by her eyes, which looked up at him holding back tears. But he decided that, until he understood, until he was surpassed—he’d be the finest man imaginable…to be a good match for such a fine woman. |
||
− | —Til’s eyes rested on the darkness of Sora’s, uncertain, weak, afraid, and fragile. But with great conviction...of her inferiority. She asked: |
||
+ | But the child fled… |
||
− | “Is it really all right? For me to make my place...with you...?” |
||
+ | She was still a paradox, while he still did not understand her at all, running even as he chased. The days and months passed idly—until one day… |
||
− | Those orichalcum eyes shimmering with pale blue flame asked, Will you abandon me? I can’t do anything. Is it worth anything to have me with you? Is there anything I can do for you? |
||
+ | …the man fell right into the trap of two strange Immanities. The otherworlders were winning while running from their past. The contradiction made the man sure: These two would know why the child ran. |
||
− | That was what Til’s eyes were asking. Til herself probably didn’t even know it as she looked to Sora with hope, and asked: |
||
+ | …And his hunch was proven right. However— |
||
− | “Is it possible...for me to be something more than a chicken?” |
||
+ | “…A damn ham-fisted resolution… I was the one running, huh?” |
||
− | *** |
||
− | “Sure it is, kid. You just gotta be deliciously enjoyed... Hic!” |
||
− | *** |
||
+ | —as their consciousnesses melded and the man touched the soul of the child from back then, he laughed at himself. He’d been called out on his limits—and he himself had run from overcoming them. |
||
− | It wasn’t Sora who answered. The booming voice was that of another man, who spoke Immanity with an awful accent and a filthy delight. |
||
+ | And from trying to imagine why the child had cried that day. Her eyes, heavy with unease, had sought— |
||
− | “You get on a man and beg, and he’ll blast right off... He’ll send you so high you’ll— Oh, but not that man. He’s a virgin. And a little flat-chested girl lover, and a sister-fancier... Ya swine, you’re a piece of work, ain’tcha?” |
||
+ | —someone to be her place of belonging, to take her fumbling hand as she looked up to that sky where she knew she couldn’t fly…in that darkness as deep as her will. That was all… The man shouldn’t have waited to be surpassed. He should have sought with the child a way to surpass his limits. |
||
− | “Why are we using a chicken as a basis for comparison?! And why you gotta slander me with things that are half-true? It makes it really hard to argue with!” |
||
+ | “… Really? Is that really how it is? You were running? Are you sure?” |
||
− | Sora howled at the indecent proposal and the uncalled-for observation. |
||
+ | In their melding consciousnesses, the sarcastic laughter of a young man interrupted their thoughts. |
||
− | @@@ |
||
+ | “You think falling into the junk heap with Til and becoming like Shiro and me is not running? You think that’s being right? Yeah, maybe it is. But maybe it isn’t.” |
||
− | Before him were the ashes of a smoking pipe, a bottle of booze...and a faint, particulate afterglow. |
||
+ | Was the man running from his tab? From the paradoxical child who hoped for what he couldn’t imagine? From his paradoxical self who tried to understand a child he couldn’t? Chasing after the child who fled against his sensibilities that told him it was impossible, going so far as to put us on the hook… |
||
− | “Oh, you want me so much you’re leapin’ for it? Ya flatter me, Niecey.” |
||
+ | So, what’s the difference between running and running from running…? |
||
− | “Nooooo! He’s caught me, he haaas!! Sir, Ma’am, help meee!!” |
||
− | The ironic laughter and the heartrending cry both came from right in front of Sora and Shiro. |
||
+ | == Partie 9 == |
||
− | They couldn’t follow it with their eyes, but Jibril explained later: Til came sailing through the air toward Sora and Shiro and ended up against the chest of a man who’d cut her off with something called a demi-shift. |
||
+ | And so…the impact that shook to the surface left the cave. The force that connected the parts of the massive body ceased, and pieces of metal fell like hail. Through the whirlwind of dust walked a man who carried an unconscious girl. A rusty man. His mithril had lost its luster due to spiritual overload, his hair and his beard now rusted over… But strangely it seemed to be the true form of a man with the surname Drauvnir. It seemed proof of the way of life of a fool, using and abusing himself to overcome himself, not knowing what would happen, unafraid of overload—the only one to overcome the limits of his race… |
||
− | There was no need to ask who this Dwarf was, nor to even guess. He grabbed the weeping, pleading Til with one hand and a large mechanical sword with the other. |
||
+ | I won’t let her die. The man had sacrificed his frame and overcome his limits to save his niece. But then suddenly—seeing her unconscious in his arms yet unwilling to release her hammer, looking genuinely happy, her chest rising and falling dramatically in sleep, smiling— |
||
− | “—‘Welcome to Hardenfell...’ I suppose that’s what I’m supposed to say, at least? Ya fockers.” |
||
+ | “……Ha…ha…! Haaa—ha-ha-haaa…!!” |
||
− | He talked down to them with a grin, making eye contact with just one orichalcum eye, dressed in the rags of a vagrant, covered in ratty gray hair… Hic. He rubbed Til with his cheek as he burbled drunkenly. That said it all. |
||
+ | —the man at last collapsed, like his broken soul sword, spread-eagled over the ground laughing. |
||
− | “Yeah!! I’ll make a woman of ya, Niecey!! Ho, I’ll take you high—” |
||
+ | “…Ahh… My fockin’ niece beat me good… The future is hers… I’ve lost…” |
||
− | == Partie 3 == |
||
+ | Yes: Veig recognized his defeat. He looked up to the heavens—and at last, he and all the Dwarves watching the broadcast— |
||
− | ...He was a sex offender. |
||
+ | —saw…the sky… |
||
− | “Wha...? It’s not like that... I just came to say hello to my fockin’ niece, y’know?” |
||
+ | An unknown sky, inconceivable underground…yet they saw it. That of which Til had spoken—just as that which had closed off the sky before had broken, for the first time in six thousand years, it was pried open—that which lay beyond the high blue sky… |
||
− | Regardless, he was still a sex offender. Nothing more, nothing less. So Jibril had posthaste severed the space to collect the testimony of this drifter they’d caught in the act. In the makeshift interrogation room, a stern-faced Sora questioned the trembling victim behind him. |
||
+ | “…You feel that, Veig Drauvnir? You see how small you are, how shitty your taste?” asked one of the shadows peering down at him. The shadowy figure glanced at the group that Jibril had saved the moment Veig’s core had broken. |
||
− | “...Til? The perp claims to be your uncle. Is this true?” |
||
+ | [[Image:NGNL V10 12.jpg|thumb]] |
||
− | “Eek...! I-I’m baffled, I am! He—just came out of nowhere... I don’t know what’s what anymore.” |
||
+ | “You gotta fight with people on your level. Sorry, man. You’re just not up to playing me yet.” |
||
− | “Oy, none o’ that shit, Niecey! I got no choice but to come t’you, or you’ll run away, won’t ye?!” |
||
+ | Ah, what a small man he had been. Veig looked up at Sora, seeing in him a very different kind of man. |
||
− | “Keep your voice down, pervert!! You want us to add an intimidation charge?!” |
||
+ | “…Small boobs, big boobs, even humongous boobs; fake boobs and real boobs… They are all boobs…” |
||
− | @@@ |
||
+ | A big man… Such a big man. Sora eyed him calmly. |
||
− | Sora shouted down the criminal who was protesting Til’s teary and terrified claim not to know him. He listened as Jibril, who’d been at the side writing down the testimony of the gray hairball, gave her take. |
||
+ | “If you claim to love boobs, how can you speak of right or wrong? Speak of love.” |
||
− | “He says he came to say hello. This indicates that he was aware of the victim’s movements... Master, does he not seem of the sort who might be deluded that he is her uncle? I would suggest looking into further charges… At the very least, there is a sound case for stalking—” |
||
+ | The big, big man’s voice was so clear you could hear him all the way to nirvana. |
||
− | “Spit it out, asshole!! How did you know where Til would be?! Who are you really?!” |
||
+ | “To reject boobs other than those of the uniform ponderous size you favor as fake, and to impose this view on others…” |
||
− | “I just had a hunch!! Who am I? Oy, Niecey! Didn’t you give them the letter?!” |
||
+ | No censure, no blame, no scorn or spite could be heard in his voice…only the sound of a man who had obtained enlightenment and imparted to the world the truth. |
||
− | “Wh-what are you talking about? The chieftain should be in the Chieftain’s Hall, he should. What head of state would greet guests looking like that?! It proves you’re a perfect stranger, you aaare!!” |
||
+ | “To speak to such a soul is less than my soul is worth.” |
||
− | Hearing the incoherent argument Til cried out, Sora got the picture. |
||
+ | …Dost thou find it wonderful? Then may it be wonderful. No one can violate thy freedom to so find it. Then why, in speaking thy feelings, shalt thou denigrate others’? Indeed… |
||
− | So, this drunken gray hairball, this would-be sexual assailant, is the agent plenipotentiary of Dwarf—the chieftain of Hardenfell. |
||
+ | “Ideal tits? They’re perfect if you work on them? Ahh, how small, how small!!” |
||
− | And from the testimony, it appeared that he was also Til’s uncle. |
||
+ | It was he, Veig, who had lacked confidence. Whereas this immeasurable man, as vast as the sky, had stood from the beginning far beyond Veig, on a higher plane. |
||
− | “...Hmm. Then let’s just suppose, for the sake of argument, that you’re the chieftain and Til’s uncle.” |
||
+ | …He was one truly great virgin. Yes… |
||
− | “What do ye mean, suppose? I am, for fock’s sake!!” |
||
+ | “If ya want ideal boobs, you’re not gonna have a chance unless you have the guts to go for the woman who goes way the hell past your ideals, are ya?!” |
||
− | “Doesn’t that just make it worse?! What kind of country do you have here? Is pressing your niece into carnal relations legal here?!” |
||
+ | Ah…it was just as his fockin’ niece had said. The child that day had already surpassed him…and now she’d become a fine woman who surpassed his imagination. Sora smiled at this, too. |
||
− | “Oh... Ya see...I just got a little carried away by the booze... It was just a little joke, damn it—” |
||
− | Chlammy and the other women eyed his defense piercingly: |
||
+ | “…Yeah. It was my limit to pursue mere perfection.” |
||
− | “...I was drunk. It was a joke.” The top two excuses of male scum. |
||
+ | Veig felt he’d seen for the first time what that child kept yearning for. She hadn’t been looking at the birds. From the very start, she’d been looking at the sky in which they flew… |
||
− | “All right, then we’ll return to the victim. Ms. Tilvilg, what is your uncle like?” |
||
+ | “…Ah, finally I can see what my fockin’ niece saw.” |
||
− | “I—I certainly don’t remember being related to such a shabby hairball stinking of booze and smok — Oh, Chieftain, you ***reek***, you do!! You smell sooo bad, you do!!” |
||
+ | That sky one wished for and longed for and pined for and yet could never imagine: that which he’d always pursued…the ideal big tits that surpassed the perfect… Ah, yes… |
||
− | Prompted by Sora, Til went and admitted that he was the chieftain |
||
+ | Bwoing… |
||
− | @@@ |
||
+ | Veig gazed innocently at Til as she slept, her rising and falling chest—her humongous boobs. Tits of such excess as to look a little unbalanced, allowing statuesque beauty to crumble. He smiled at this ideal he’d finally found, an ideal beyond limits. He was happy…… |
||
− | It looked as though being repeatedly called stinky with such a pained and tear-stained face had a considerable impact on the chieftain, who slumped silently. Meanwhile, Shiro was lost in her own thoughts… |
||
+ | == Partie 10 == |
||
− | The uncle of the lowliest of Dwarves was the greatest of Dwarves. An embarrassing middle-aged ne’er-do-well who wouldn’t leave alone the unwelcoming girl disappointment. |
||
+ | Indeed… Only two in history had seen that divine realm. A third who had opened the door without being able to see it was responsible for this by-product of a successful failure. In the E-bomb shell had been placed two false ethers to conceptually resonate. |
||
− | ...What if...? Shiro started thinking. Til was a cheap and easy potential heroine who naturally stirred the desire to protect—the kind you’d see in a visual novel. She’d assumed her to be her rival for the little sister role, fearsome for her characteristic of falling as soon as she appeared. But what if......she wasn’t a potential… |
||
+ | “Hey—th-these are heavy; I can’t even stand! ‘Big’ doesn’t even describe these!” |
||
− | ...NPC pairing flag...? Yeah... Enough circumstantial evidence. But not there yet...! |
||
+ | “You see, Dora, this is the conceptual rewrite of ‘big boob(?) essence’—” |
||
− | —What if she fell to someone other than Brother? Shiro shook her head, flustered. It was too early to make that call. A drunken hairball and a legal Loli—there were still some issues with the optics! |
||
+ | “Analysis: Bust value of woman of unknown name. Provisionally categorized under handle ‘megatits.’ Very niche support.’” |
||
− | But, of course, no one else was aware of the new logical perspective Shiro had discovered. |
||
+ | “What are you talking about?! These are going to turn back, aren’t they? I can’t live like this!” |
||
− | “...Ahhh, ohhh... I remember nowww... I’m...faaake.” |
||
+ | “Why, I’m fine if we don’t turn back, insofar as I’ve happened to match Chlammy. ” |
||
− | The chieftain was finally coming out of the shock— |
||
+ | “You must be joking! Why do I have even less now?! I won’t tolerate having no boobs! Hey, Fi, saying your small boobs match me, are you indirectly dissing me?! Give me back my boobs!” |
||
− | “I’ll go take a bath... Let’s say I was just the messenger...” |
||
+ | “Query: This unit’s bust provisionally categorized under ‘ample bosom’… Questioning conceptual rewrite of ‘big boob essence.’” |
||
− | —but he didn’t seem quite to have recovered. He wobbled away. |
||
+ | “You see, it is not ‘big boob essence’ but ‘big boob(?) essence’—” |
||
− | —The one you just called stinky wasn’t me. Let’s just leave it at that, please. Sora and Shira nodded silently at the droopy hairball. |
||
+ | And there the ladies cavorted, their boobs changing randomly. Exactly as in the experiment four days earlier, except that this time it worked without an explosion. The conceptual rewriter used Lóni Drauvnir’s “big boob essence” along with one other false essence. Yes, just the same thing had happened as four days ago—instead of an explosion, it was its by-product. In other words: |
||
− | “Make sure you bring those guys to me—I mean, us. All right?” |
||
+ | “To summarize, it seems to be as in the experiment of four days ago, when, according to the sublime teachings of my masters, I engraved on unprocessed essence a seal identical to that for the big boob essence and activated this unidentified essence,” Jibril rehashed for the two who hadn’t been there. “I posit that a two-way reaction with the big boob essence |
||
− | “Sir! I was already doing that, I was!! Tell the chieftain there’s no need to send some smelly, suspicious stranger. I’ll have them at the Chieftain’s Hall forthwith, I will!! Shoo, shoo! Pft, pft!!” |
||
+ | has generated a composite conceptual rewrite.” |
||
− | Til dismissed him, Jibril unsevered the space, and the dejected hairball swung his great sword, a spirit arm, whereupon the blade split into multiple parts—or rather, countless dazzling short swords. |
||
+ | Indeed…the principle was unknown. No one even understood how conceptual falsification worked. Thus, even Jibril was unable to explicate or elucidate this incomprehensibility. But she described it in words in such a rough manner as was possible. So: |
||
− | “Ahh, ya fockers. If my fockin’ niece runs off again, I’ll have to go get her, so you’ll have to wai—” |
||
+ | “In short—the conceptual rewrite is in the form of a question: ‘Are these big boobs?’” |
||
+ | “These clearly cannot be described as big boobs!” |
||
− | @@@ |
||
+ | “Yes, you see, it is ‘big boob(?) essence,’ such as to make everyone ask, ‘These are big boobs?’” |
||
− | “Chieftain’s Hall, Floor Five-oh-eight!! I’ll take them with tears to the reception room right in front of the chieftain, I will!!” |
||
+ | …… |
||
− | As easily as breathing, the hairball saw right through Til’s full intention to wait nearby. |
||
+ | == Partie 11 == |
||
− | “Okay, you’re released. But what’s your name, Chief?” |
||
+ | “For the record, this is the first and last time I’m gonna play Cupid for anyone, all right?!” |
||
− | Sora peered at him keenly just as the teary-eyed Til was doing. |
||
+ | Sora paid no attention to the commotion. He took the hand of his sister, apparently the only one unaffected: Big boobs? Where? |
||
− | The man tutted and left just a few words with the faint light as he vanished into thin air. |
||
+ | “For God’s sake, I’m still updating my years alive and without a girlfriend!! And now I’m supposed to help some d00d land a heroine?! And not just any heroine, but the one and only—the real thing—the brown legal Loli monster girl!” |
||
− | “Veig Drauvnir. Move your arses, fockin’ outsiders.” |
||
+ | “…I hope you find…happiness.♪ That’s one heroine…out of the running…” |
||
+ | The siblings walked away. Veig heard them loud and clear. He grinned softly at the sleeping face of his niece, who still smiled happily in his arms. |
||
+ | “…Ho… Bitches, I’ve heard your answer… I feel your soul…” |
||
+ | There was something the otherworldly siblings had never spoken of to the end. They hadn’t put that answer into words, or even returned it in their souls. Indeed… |
||
+ | “I was wrong to question you. Thanks for showin’ me…the sky…” |
||
+ | He got the sense that if they could beat this game world, they could say they’d fled to win… So: |
||
+ | “Lemme help ya build the sky of your future. Let’s be bosom buddies.” |
||
+ | They’d overthrow this game world, its rules, everything. They’d beat the world. Just you wait. |
||
+ | |||
+ | We’re coming for you next, friggin’ Earth… |
||
Line 870: | Line 865: | ||
<noinclude> |
<noinclude> |
||
+ | |||
== Références == |
== Références == |
||
<references /> |
<references /> |
||
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{| border="1" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0" style="margin: 1em 1em 1em 0; background: #f9f9f9; border: 1px #aaaaaa solid; padding: 0.2em; border-collapse: collapse;" |
{| border="1" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0" style="margin: 1em 1em 1em 0; background: #f9f9f9; border: 1px #aaaaaa solid; padding: 0.2em; border-collapse: collapse;" |
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|- |
|- |
||
− | | Revenir au [[No_Game_No_Life_: |
+ | | Revenir au [[No_Game_No_Life_:_Tome_10_Chapitre_4|Chapitre 4]] |
| Retourner au [[No_Game_No_Life_-_Français|Sommaire]] |
| Retourner au [[No_Game_No_Life_-_Français|Sommaire]] |
||
− | | Passer |
+ | | Passer à l' [[No_Game_No_Life_:_Tome_10_Épilogue|Épilogue]] |
|- |
|- |
||
|} |
|} |
Latest revision as of 20:18, 28 September 2022
Chapitre 5 : Pour répondre (Pragmatisme)[edit]
Et donc,
la marionnette s'enfuit vers le ciel que l'oisillon désirait tant,
vers ce monde étroit et sombre.
Oui...
Un ciel pour que la marionnette soit à l'abri du mal, pour sourire du cœur.
Un endroit où personne ne les piétinerait, où personne ne les blesserait,
aucune force ne les contraint, aucun besoin de changer.
Un nouveau monde où ils pourraient voler.
Ce jour-là,
L'oisillon savait très bien que ça ne serait probablement jamais le cas.
L'oisillon implora la marionnette, qui jura de se battre :
Aucun ciel ne vaut la peine de te voir souffrir.
Alors la marionnette, elle aussi, s'enfuit dans cette même cage.
Jusqu'à ce que nous trouvions un moyen de créer ce ciel,
c'est ce que pensait la marionnette dans ce monde étouffant.
Pensée et seulement pensée...
Doutant et vacillant, ne trouvant rien à chercher,
la marionnette pensait toujours à cette promesse :
Ce jour-là,
dans un nouveau pays, regardant les cieux,
voyant le bébé oiseau déployer ses ailes et sourire,
la marionnette vide - le ciel - Sora -
Traduit avec www.DeepL.com/Translator (version gratuite)
Partie 1[edit]
...Une scène remplie de l'écho de l'éruption de la Forge Sacrée... le site d'élimination des déchets.
Une gigantesque machine humanoïde argentée avance à pas lourds dans les ruines souterraines ensevelies sous les déchets métalliques. Des larmes coulent dans les yeux ardents de Veig qui marmonne avec désolation le premier souci de sa vie.
"... Ai-je vraiment fait quelque chose de si mal... ?"
Il se souvint des deux âmes qu'il avait fracassées après une lutte inattendue - l'âme de cette petite herbe étrangement coriace aux seins excellents, et l'âme de cette vipère incompréhensiblement toxique qui avait fait craquer son épée pour la première fois. Se balançant sombrement, vacillant en avant, il pensait :
...Que diable ai-je fait... ?
Veig se souvenait avoir été remercié, mais jamais blâmé. Pourtant, tout ce qu'il ressentait maintenant était un mystérieux sentiment de culpabilité gravé dans son âme trop profondément pour le nier. Maintenant, il se tenait là, devant la masse métallique tombée, la machine gisant sur le sol avec ses membres totalisés.
"...Ho... J'ai bien dit que je serais en retard, mais pour faire une sieste, tu as du cran, hein ?"
Veig a regardé attentivement le cadre cassé. Par le biais du système de communication, il a accusé ses pilotes de faire les morts.
Dans ce jeu, les attaques ne causent aucun dommage direct à la machine adverse. Par conséquent, tout dommage doit provenir d'une défaillance du rite ou d'une erreur de tir - ou être auto-infligé. Et honnêtement, c'était les deux. L'intuition de Veig lui a dit. Il a soulevé le corps brisé et a hurlé.
"Hey, je te parle !! Ton adversaire, c'est moi. Ne te retourne pas et ne meurs pas. Tu n'as aucun sens ?!"
En effet... Sora et Shiro n'ont jamais eu la moindre chance contre Veig dans une bataille d'armes spirituelles. Il était donc inévitable qu'ils perdent. Mais quand même...
"Tu n'as pas l'intention de te taire sans dire un mot sur ton âme, n'est-ce pas ? !"
Oui, ils avaient tenu tête à Veig avec une tempête de balles impensable. Mais ils n'ont rien emporté de leur âme, le barrage était trop fragile. Tout ce qu'il a fait c'est rejeter l'attaque de Veig et dire non à son âme...
Il n'a rien dit. Il n'a rien admis. Leur âme avait seulement rejeté la sienne et était restée inébranlable. Veig a serré les dents. S'ils pouvaient faire autant, alors pourquoi ?
Il souleva le cadre en ruine comme s'il le tenait par le col et se mit en colère :
“Quand allez-vous répondre à ma question ?!”
Et il a enfin obtenu une réponse.
"...Tout de suite, je le ferai. Je vais vous donner votre réponse, je vais le faire."
... Une voix a murmuré à travers la porte.
"Whuh ?!"
L'épave a soudainement répliqué en explosant, libérant un torrent d'âme fou. Elle lui répondit par une puissante imagerie qui lui vola momentanément sa conscience.
—……
Il était au fond d'un petit trou, sombre et exigu. Veig connaissait la fille qui pleurait en regardant le ciel, seule. Il la connaissait bien... la fille incapable de voler, qui plus que quiconque admirait les oiseaux qui volaient si haut.
Une fille paradoxale, elle savait qu'elle ne pouvait pas voler et pourtant elle levait les yeux au ciel... Elle pleurait même si elle avait abandonné... Le monde l'interrogeait avec des questions sans réponse - pourquoi elle avait fui, pourquoi elle n'avait pas essayé - puis lui demandait pourquoi elle pleurait... et la méprisait pour cela. Il l'a laissée dans ce trou... sans rien vouloir...
La fille solitaire... balançant son marteau à travers les larmes...... Il-
—……
Veig a essayé de tendre la main... mais blam, l'explosion a secoué la grotte et l'a tiré de sa rêverie. Dès qu'il a jeté un coup d'oeil autour de lui, peut-être plus tôt, il a deviné ce qui se passait. Il grimaça et hurla d'impatience.
"Quelle blague... Vous n'avez jamais eu personne là-dedans depuis le début ? C'était télécommandé... ?!"
Maintenant que tu le dis, il n'y avait aucune règle qui disait que tu devais piloter la machine... si ? S'ils le contrôlaient depuis un cockpit à l'extérieur du cadre, ils pouvaient le balancer sans problème.
Mais même si c'était télécommandé, ils devaient être connectés à leurs bras spirituels. Ce qui signifiait que faire exploser leur propre cadre si négligemment aurait des répercussions. Et en effet, le sol a tremblé avec une réaction en chaîne d'explosions l'une après l'autre dans toute la décharge.
Les esprits générés ont dessiné des lignes de lumière comme si elles circulaient dans des circuits gravés sur la scène. Le circuit de lumière convergeait pour le montrer :
La véritable unité !
Désireux de voir où se trouvait le vrai cockpit, Veig a suivi la lumière de l'esprit jusqu'à sa destination. Il s'est avéré qu'il se trouvait au centre de la scène tremblante, si loin que sa fonction zoom était tout juste suffisante pour le distinguer. Au sommet d'une plante particulièrement haute, ses yeux ont trouvé leur cible et se sont ouverts en grand. Il s'agissait d'une fille qu'il connaissait bien, debout sur le siège d'un cockpit ouvert.
"Vous demandez pourquoi j'ai fui ce monde sanglant, n'est-ce pas... ? ...C'est une question stupide, en effet."
Mais c'est une fille qu'il ne connaissait pas qui lui a murmuré. Ses yeux, embrasés d'un feu inextinguible, regardaient sa machine au loin. La fille, avec un morceau de ferraille en forme de marteau dans sa main, a parlé comme si elle déposait une déclaration de guerre. De son cœur, elle a dit son âme... pas des faits objectifs, mais ses sentiments :
"C'est parce que je méprise ce monde, vraiment."
Partie 2[edit]
Til’s voice, resolute, was yet like her limbs…jittery. She couldn’t help but tremble, because of what she saw down there from the open cockpit—Veig standing there in the venue that still quaked from the blasts—and because of the sparkling hammer in her right hand. Regardless—
“Don’t worry. We’ll blast off with you. We promised, didn’t we?”
“…Brother…always…keeps, his promises… Trust us, okay?”
—Sora’s and Shiro’s voices intoned from the seat in front of her, joyful but firm. And Til felt them holding her left hand tight. She broke into a smile to realize her trembling had somehow stopped…and she continued with her eyes fixed straight ahead on Veig’s machine, all the way through to the man inside.
“…I hate this country. I hate Hardenfell, I do.”
She reaffirmed her feelings—her belief. This arrogant world told her not to run. This
oppressive world told her not to be ashamed. Til looked up at its tireless way of life and sneered at it.
“I love the sky, I do… In this country…the sky is closed off, it is.”
The cave’s ceiling reminded her; lost and confused, she’d ended up in this dump before she knew it, and the world asked her, Why did you run? Now, Til knew the feeling of a hand in hers. Now, she knew another world—that of those two. Now, she could say it:
Ah…there never was a place for me here.
—Screw this place—!!
So—!
“I also hate the chieftain of this country. I hate you, I do…!”
The hammer sparkled ever brighter as Til’s words spilled out uncontrollably, with the pain that burned her up. What came back was a lonely, sorrowful chuckle. Til ground her teeth.
…She’d known—no, she’d had a hunch—that he’d say that. What he was saying. As if it was everything—
“I hate that…how everything’s just as you expected… I hate iiit!!”
Her voice impulsively swelled with the pain that only grew:
“I hate how you act like you’re so great, I do! I hate even more that you actually are, I do!!”
The dam had burst, and her feelings could no longer be contained.
“I hate how you advertise yourself as a genius, I do! I hate how I can’t argue because you actually are a genius, I do!! I hate how you look down on me, I do! I hate so much that it’s only natural because you’re above me, I do!! I hate how you’re so hairy!! You shaved too much, you say?! So what? Are you trying to rub it in? I wish you’d go to hell, I do!! I hate you, I hate you, I hate you—U-Uncle, you’re a pervert!! I hate you very, very, veeery much, I do!!”
«Whoa!! Come on, stop already or I’m really gonna cry! Goddamn!»
The momentum had flushed out everything Til wanted to say. Inattentive to the tearful begging over the comm system, Til caught her breath. As the shaking of the stage and the sparkling of her hammer and her pain all grew in speed, she wiped her tears. With a sharp, firm voice, she mulled over her words carefully and gave her answer:
“I hate you. That’s why I run. If that’s not enough for you to understand—”
Then in the spirit of the game:
“—I’ll sock it to you like this—and then I think you will understand, I do.”
Yes—seeing behind her eyelids the place the feeling of those two had taken her as they held her left hand, that black sky with a white bird, Til laid down the gauntlet sonorously.
“I fled to win—to honor my promise, I did.”
…A tactical withdrawal was made when one had a chance of victory… She had been just lost, but now it would be redefined—no. Each time another explosion went off, the spirits converged into her hammer, and it was that pain.
And now it had been redefined—!!
That pain had turned her conviction into that of the past. Til savagely swung her hammer as she—
—bellowed forth her soul with the stirring of a power beyond all normal conception throughout the venue.
“I fled for the sake of this day, when I’d surpass you, I diiid!!”
Partie 3[edit]
It was a power that all feared instinctively. The memories sleeping deep in their blood awakened. An outrageous power of a whole different rank, a whole different status, a whole different order of magnitude—quite literally a different level. The future brought on in the next few moments by this power beyond reason didn’t take someone like Veig to foresee. It was a strike from the heavens that sneered at every one of heaven’s gifts crawling atop the earth, judging them likewise of null value. No one could mistake that power. It was
a Heavenly Smite……
“Hey, whoaaa! I thought the Flügel wasn’t—hey, isn’t that against the rules?!”
From his machine—his cockpit—Veig screeched, blanching. Someone who wasn’t in the game—with magic that wasn’t even a seal rite!! His one eye searched in a panic for the Flügel, but in the next moment—
—he realized that the center of the crawling power…was Til’s hammer. And his one eye was opened by the roar over the comm system and the unheard-of shock that followed… Yes:
«Ultra-large-scale spirit-arm expansion—connect all!! Ariiiise!!!»
Til’s face wrenched in agony as she brought down the hammer. There was a flash as it bore through the cockpit…and through the plant below. With that, there came a moment of silence to the blast-stricken venue. And then…
“—?!!”
…a vertical oscillation unlike anything that had gone before tossed them. A heavy shock came from behind Veig. He dodged instinctively on the spot, but from the mass of metal that had only grazed him flowed a tempestuous soul.
……
A girl who wanted to imagine things that could not be imagined. A girl who wanted to fly though by no effort could she fly. Saying she could do nothing, she chased the bird in the sky for which there was nothing to do…
They said she was just running. They mocked that it was impossible. Her soul…
«I…knew it! …I knew it!! Better than anyone, I did…!!»
The transmission helped Veig crawl back to reality. But another—no, ten more—no, a hundred, a thousand, ten thousand—innumerable storms of metal whipped through the stage and assaulted his unit like squalls.
Just scraps, they hadn’t much in the way of force or even speed. But every time the fierce soul contained in them scratched by his frame, it left residue. As Til’s voice, wheezing in agony, continued to come through, it pounded at Veig’s will, hard, so hard—
«So…you wanted me to live like you…? Fa-kew!!»
To live like them. Like a Dwarf. Without giving up. Without going astray or tiring. To try to overcome natural gifts. To live without shame or retreat. Indeed… Putting themselves on pedestals, though they couldn’t overcome Veig!! Looking as if they understood, talking as if they knew!! They’d called her rubbish, and then!! They’d all said it. They’d basically said this…
—Everyone else is doing it, so you should, too.
—You can dream you’ll be rewarded. Just do it—
—just shut up and do your work!!—
«I don’t like a world that tells me what to do… I hate it, I do!!»
I’ll never give in…
I’ll overcome the chieftain and destroy those dictates—!!
I’ll use measuring instruments and Elven theory. I’ll use anything to find a different way!
I’ll show him… So she thought…
«But…no matter what I did…I just…couldn’t find anything!!»
Just piling up failures. Bathed in error, lost, confused, making one mistake after another. At last surrendering to a false resignation, as paradoxical as ever. Unable to say anything in return… At some point…she came to think she’d forgotten those feelings, and just wandered, pathetically.
«…But—hee-hee… Now I know what to say—I do…»
Weeping, sobbing, yet the two souls grinned. At last Veig realized the true nature of the maelstrom of metal pounding his unit. And for the first time in his life, he said, It couldn’t be—he doubted his own intuition.
“……Hey… Ho. I must be hallucinating, ain’t I?”
He saw the whirlwind of metal converging. Not the ground shaking, but the stage moving. Not the metal flying, but just gathering. The parts, the catalysts were joining and coupling and assembling. The majestic waste disposal site was rising as one. The stage itself was wakening—and standing up. That was his impression. It was confirmed by Til’s announcement to everyone watching in Hardenfell, I’ll tell you, and the thing that towered before his eyes—a thing inconceivably gargantuan.
«You forge ahead without shame…as you will—but I, too…will do as I will, I will!!»
She’d led a life of shame—failing, contradicting herself, getting lost without end. Today, this moment, was what it had all been for, and for that she was proud. She trumpeted to all the world that had rejected her, just as they were taught:
«Shut up!! Your stupid world can eat shit, it can!! Pft!»
Having asserted her freedom to rebel, the girl crumpled. The siblings embraced her and kept her from falling. Veig gaped at last.
It wasn’t from finally observing the giant object towering over him. It was the girl held by the siblings in the now-empty cockpit at the top…the girl weeping tears of heartfelt joy that she was not alone—a girl beyond his knowledge, who looked down at a bird from heights beyond its knowledge…with a dazzling smile…beyond all knowledge.
«…Uncle, did you…ever imagine…this…?»
She asked him whether this was a sight that effort and sensibility could get to—and that moment, a torrent of violence descended upon Veig’s unit…
Partie 4[edit]
Neither Veig nor any of the Dwarves watching through all of Hardenfell had ever imagined it, most likely. However, aside from Dwarves…the three who were watching at Til’s hideout did not seem all that surprised. Their eyes still on the monitor, they spoke admiringly…
“…Wow… A city can walk, can it…? Oh, is that also a spirit arm?”
“To be more precise, it is a spirit-arm expansion connected to her hammer, on which she engraved my one-percent Heavenly Smite.”
“Observation: Height 9,700 meters. Length 74,200 meters. Cannon count 982. Definition: High-maneuver fortress class. Evidence of brilliance of Master. Excessive. Zero maturity. This unit loves that part of him, too… Blush.”
Steph knew those siblings… She’d imagined they’d do something unimaginable. No, she’d known it. So she watched the screen with a sense of resignation, as a shadow desperately ran from the storm falling from the mountain of steel…
Partie 5[edit]
At the venue, rain fell from the heap of scrap—torrential rain deep underground where there was no sky. Each drop sliced the wind, pierced the ground, and created a deeper depth below the bottom.
“What a little man you are, Veig!! You talk big, but you’re the one who’s smaaaall!!”
It was a hailstorm of scrap that accompanied the raucous laughter.
“You called this stage our hunting grounds?! What puny thoughts—what a tiny imagination!! As would be expected from someone so small-minded as to only appreciate big boobs—ah, it’s a veritable microcosm of your life!!”
“…You said…we could use any machines…and do anything with the venue, didn’t you?♪”
Towering with a sneer on top was a giant mecha of junk—of the unwanted. Of unvalued failures and rejected scrap.
This was the gathering place for the things that might have not been mistakes. This was their home turf, they indicated with a sneer.
“Who’s gonna take the time to hunt their prey after they’ve already lured them in?”
Sora uproariously exposed the truth that was now assaulting Veig.
“If you’re gonna lure in your prey, obviously you’re gonna go straight to a trap, aren’t you, you scrub?!”
It was a cage, a trap. The junk itself, the venue itself, the soul of a girl who had patched failure to error itself—
“Ladies and gentlemen—the venue itself is our machine!! How do you like that?!”
“…We of Blank call it…the Spirit of Mother Til…♪”
It literally looked down on Veig, nine hundred seventy times his size. Sora and Shiro cackled, back at the reins for their big counterattack.
—Come, O ye who declare yourselves infallible, those of the righteous world. Now our patchwork heap shall speak with iron and lightning and fire to test our Mother’s spirit. We shall now question the refuse that you have shorn away and discarded in your quest to forge. We ask: On what grounds did you reject us—?!
“Personally, I’m not as into the NEXTs as the Arms Forts built by average schmucks to confront them.”
In fiction, raw size is destined to be overthrown.
Which is how we know that reality is different!! Indeed—!!
“Raw mass is the secret to defeating genius, biiitch!! We haven’t designed this bullet hell with any place to hide! You trap ’em and smash ’em with sheer numbers! There’s no better tactic!! All you gotta do is win, baby, win!!”
In reality—overkill is all the better!!
Seated in the cockpit, Sora and Shiro controlled the massive body and filled the screen with projectiles.
«The fock?! How’d you get such a crazy machine?!»
Veig screeched as he just barely managed to demi-shift from one empty location to another.
«What kinda Dwarf has the power to run a barmy monster like that?!»
Between that and the Heavenly Strike, Veig was sure now there were some spirits involved far outside the regulations. He raged at their perceived violation of the rules.
……Ha. His opponents laughed in unison. They knew it: Dwarves were the perfect negative examples. After all, they were just half-right. Just as he guessed that the stage itself was their machine, but that wasn’t even close to enough. On Sora’s lap sat Shiro—and on her lap sat a girl whose face was scrunched in pain, but who still sneered with fearless irony—
“Chieftain… You ask that now? I couldn’t even start up our first machine without boosting, I couldn’t.”
It seemed he had still overlooked the trick in Shiro’s arms. Yes, it was the murmuring of Til, the real trick, most impossible of all—
“To begin with…I can’t even use magic without boosting, I can’t.”
«—Huhhh?!»
—that made Veig cry out in long-delayed recognition. Sora chuckled. Yes, a Dwarf so great as Veig probably couldn’t have imagined such a trick. Til, by nature, couldn’t even use magic, much less operate a supermassive spirit arm. For Til—
—WAS AS SMOOTH AS DOLPHIN—!!!
Dwarves used catalysts because of the spiritual overload caused by their mithril—to synchronize externally. But Til didn’t have that mithril!! She wasn’t subject to such overload, or even load for that matter!! That was why she used boosting… Yes…the hidden truth that astonished Jibril when Til used her shift. Til couldn’t use magic without boosting. Conversely, that meant she could if she used boosting…
…It meant she could use boosting. For example: She could chain boost to boost on the chain reaction of explosions of the huge number of demi-shift anchors they’d planted, funnel the spirits into her hammer on which she’d engraved a Rite of Heavenly Smiting, and synchronize it into her body! With the vast amount of spirits thus summoned under her control, she could operate this leviathan assemblage of parts, this scrap on the stage on which she’d engraved seal rites…!!
… Yes, if a normal Dwarf tried this, they’d blow right up. It would be impossible and meaningless. Just as Til said, it would be as perverse an idea as building an underwater breathing apparatus for a fish. But for such an abnormal dwarf, it was both possible and essential. For Til—
—WAS AS SMOOTH AS DOLPHIN—!!!
«Wha—? Wait, whoa— Niecey, don’t tell me yours still hasn’t growwwn?!»
“Heh…heh-heh, Ch-Chieftain…I’d like to see you burn in hell! I would…”
Listening to their exchange, Sora, to be honest, was fairly sure by now this was not the case. But he still insisted: they had to be talking about beards!! So anyway—!
“Heh, this is the difference in natural gifts… Bow before the absolute wall you cannot overcome, Veig!!”
«Fock!! How can a Dwarf’s body endure that shite? You wanna kill my fockin’ niece?!»
The transmission to Sora roared full of naked rage. Understandable. One percent of Jibril’s power—the power to run a supermassive machine like that—was as reckless as pouring rocket fuel into an automobile. Therefore…
“…Didn’t you say no mercy? A man’s word isn’t worth much these days, huh?”
«—!!»
…Sora saw that Veig was thinking of taking a bullet and losing the game for Til’s sake, and Sora stopped him, making a face. If Til died, it would probably spell death for Sora and Shiro, who were holding her, too. Til was barely conscious, but still she held firm to her hammer and smiled.
—Veig meant to lose intentionally.
This man didn’t seem to understand what a humiliation that would be—!!
“To hell with your patronizing sympathy!! This is a trap—there’s no place for you to hide and no room for you to choose!!”
Sora’s howl what seemed like a signal to that which sat somewhere in the supermassive machine behind the giant cannon that opened its mouth with a roar: another machine. Sora and the operator inside the additional cockpit announced savagely:
“There’s only one future: Til’s complete victory!!”
«Whyyy, it’s time for the showwwdowwwn.♥»
That moment, the light of the Holy Forge flashed from the barrel, and suddenly a metal glob blocked the opening. Connected to the muzzle, the object sparkled—and this time, Veig froze, mech and all. It was another legacy of the past that he could not mistake.
“Can you dodge a bomb? If you know a way, as a gamer, I’d very much like to know!”
A bomb indeed, leaving no place to hide. A bomb called…yes, that’s right:
…The E-bomb…
Partie 6[edit]
In the cockpit behind the blazing E-bomb was Fiel, smiling.
“Why, you’ll note that we’ve followed the rules to a T. And in a most sustainable way, if I might add.♥”
No magic other than seal rites. You lost if your core broke. And the players here were everyone…
“Anyone can very well recycle the unit we lost in, caaan’t theyyy?♥”
True, Til could connect and use Fiel’s unit. Also:
“Incluuuding the seal of protection of that boorish fire, and incluuuding the seal rites on the unit.♪”
Fiel had in mind the seventh player, and their fifth trump card.
They hadn’t bothered with any seal rites for the specs, but they had bothered with seal rites.
They had implemented an eighty-four-fold rite using the seal of protection of an Old Deus. And they’d used the Holy Forge, the power of Ocain, to enable shifting.
Til had subsumed Fiel’s unit and commandeered it under the protection of Ocain. And there was no rule that Til couldn’t use that thing shifted from her hideout!! Chlammy asked suspiciously of the merry Fiel, who occupied the same cockpit:
“…Fi, I’ve been wondering: Whose idea was it to use the seal of Ocain’s protection?”
She’d heard of the “rites of spirit-breaking” or whatever that they’d used in the War, such as Áka Si Anse—spells that used seal rites to call upon the protection of Kainas, creator of the Elves. But it was said they were no longer usable after the Ten Covenants. In that case, this thing Fiel produced must have been newly compiled, after the War.
…Who would have implemented a seal rite to call upon Ocain, of all gods? For that matter, even having grown up in Elven Gard, Chlammy had never heard of a spell that could un-quasi-shift such a large mass.
“Mmm, I don’t know, myself. It’s been the Nirvalens’ ace in the hole for generations.”
Fiel tilted her head. Yes, and they’d said this…
“They said trump cards are trump cards because you don’t reveal them until the showdown.”
Howeverrr… She gave Chlammy her greatest smile as she continued.
“Why, my ultimate trump card is you, Chlammy.♪”
Fiel had gone to such lengths as to reveal her family’s secret. She smiled at her best friend: They had lost—and that therefore was the victory planned. Chlammy beamed and reflexively looked away, embarrassed.
“If you say we can’t win…why, then we can’t win.”
Yes…from the moment Chlammy had concluded that they couldn’t win…
…Fiel had resigned from this game…
So, they had requested of Sora and Shiro a friendly token of appreciation for their friendly cooperation. It was a condition of the deal, in other words: No matter who won—
—Veig must be commanded to bear shame for the rest of his life…
“Whyyy, it doesn’t matter what you do as long as you win!! Our objective is to convict that thing, the offender! In which caaase, it doesn’t maaatter who uses whose power to win. As long as the crook gets his just deserts, we have wooon!!”
Fiel’s bright demeanor made Chlammy chuckle.
“…Well, we do have to regret a little we didn’t make good on our chance to win directly.”
“But we must count ourselves blessed to have been able to pummel you a bit.♪ After allll—”
“Yes. We are really perfect outsiders to this matter. We’re not even friends, you know?”
As they snidely echoed Veig’s remarks, Chlammy had a thought.
—They could win an unwinnable match through someone else’s power. Then how might they answer an unanswerable question?
“We’ll make others answer for us… In other words, as usual, we win through sophistry.”
—Having had their past questioned: Have you paid your tab?
—They answered with their future: I will when I can…
……
“…And so the puppet continued building the sky… The sky only they still could not see…”
In the cramped cockpit, Chlammy smiled subtly as she gazed upon the sky before her. They’d opened it for her, for Fi, for Jibril, the Werebeasts, the Old Deus, and Ex Machina… And now…
“They’re opening up Til’s sky… Going on until they find their own…”
Partie 7[edit]
At last, brilliant, blinding light.
Til had gathered things from outside—welded them, forged them, patched them together in one wrong way after another. Now her fire melted them all together, and cast them as ingenuity, which she used to reach the sky.
“…Uncle…have I…kept…my promise…?”
The spirits raged, and her body ached as if it was about to break.
“Have I…reached a sky…that no one has seen before?!”
The heat threatened to burn out her spirit corridor junction nerves. But alas, Til smiled regardless…
“…Do you…want…to know…what it’s…like…?!”
By now, only one thing entered her muddied consciousness: the distant sky Til was sure she’d never imagined, and that no one else ever had—the feeling of floating in a deep, black sky, Veig too far behind to see, uncertain of whether he could hear the voice she wrung out, or even whether it was coming out at all—
Still, she’d fulfill the promise of that distant day. She’d vowed that she would surpass him—and promised something to the bird of that day. She spelled out the wish she’d held in her heart, that her words, her smile would reach their destination.
“You piece of shit, you’ll never understand, you won’t!! Serves you right, it does!! Pft!”
«Niecey!! You got to get back at me, huh?! Ain’t ya imitatin’ me?!»
Veig’s transmission came through at trace volume. Til did hear it, though, and she closed her eyes and grinned.
…Please. I’m about to fall under the delusion that I have become a bird, I do. But I know…that it’s just an illusion, I do. By tomorrow, perhaps even by one second in the future, I’ll be made to know
Very well then…!! Making mistakes is my only specialty—!!
—Assuming I can… Assuming that nothing’s impossible! I’ll fail again, and build up my mountain of mistakes, I will!!
She’d lose her way, she’d get confused, she’d blunder—and every time, she’d cry and wail and gnash her teeth in vexation! Til would take the long way around like a perfect fool, getting lost repeatedly, pathetically drenched in tears and shame. She might never even know if it had meaning. But there was a sight that could only be seen by taking that foolish path.
It could never be seen by those born with natural talent…by the birds that didn’t build airplanes.
It could never be seen by the birds that had never felt that obsession: I want to fly anyway. There was such an entertaining sight to see, to be found in a place no one imagined.
…I’m ready to make as many mistakes as it takes. I can say that now, I can…
And so, while Til went limp in Shiro’s arms—
“…Well, bet this is news to you smart folks. Here’s the common knowledge of the weak. Listen with gratitude, yeah?!”
—Sora howled at the shell of the E-bomb, which glowed like a star to announce it was ready for blast-off.
“…Generally speaking, things in the world don’t go the way you imagine…”
Just as they had sailed for India and mistakenly arrived in the New World; as they had tried to prove everything with mathematics and mistakenly refuted their mathematics; as they had built rockets to reach the moon and mistakenly dropped them on Earth…
…As far as humans were concerned, perfection was a waste of time. They’d mess it up anyway. To seek mere perfection wasn’t going to do it. Therefore—!!
“Your thinking is too damn small!! If you want to fly, you’re not gonna have a chance unless you have the guts to go past the damn moon and crash into Mars by mistake!!”
Well…yes…?
“Even if you get up and down backward, you might be able to go through the planet to the sky at the other side, right?♪”
You might end up with a result better than perfect, right?
«…You fockin’ with me? Shit—»
A man born with natural talent… A bird that flew by sensibility alone…transmitted back with a sense of awe at the unknown he’d never had before—or not in a long time at least.
Indeed…they couldn’t use the E-bomb. So he didn’t know what it was they were on the verge of launching. He didn’t know what it was to accomplish. He didn’t even know a thing about the heights where his niece floated now.
But even so! There was one thing he was sure about. He howled with a longing he’d never felt.
«So you’re saying you don’t know what the hell will happen. You’re bloody daft, aren’t ya?!»
If it might be the case that Til couldn’t take it—!! That instant, Veig’s unit appeared to get blown away and then vanished from sight. One soul raced forth through the air, with maneuvers uncapturable by Sora’s eyes, or by the venue’s cameras. It left no trace; the unit broken down, it raced past its limits, riding the force of a fist.
—I’ll overcome even that—
Detecting the single strike to end it, Sora smirked and answered inwardly.
—Yeah. That’s right! That’s how we live, as fools incapable of anything but straying and failing and erring. Bet it’s a breath of fresh air for smarty-pants jerks like you who live with all trial and no error, huh?
What’s gonna happen? How the hell would I know?!
“That’s why you gotta test that shit! That’s what we idiots call science!”
Sora sneered and activated the contents of the E-bomb in the muzzle, and a moment later Veig unleashed one soulful strike that pierced the shell.
Partie 8[edit]
It was a full-on collision of Veig’s and Til’s souls, entangling, stirring, radiating white. No one could tell whose soul it was anymore. Everything raced through the catalysts and through the minds of all present…
……
…The man had been born with outstanding sensibilities. Everyone knew him to be a genius. He too knew this, not as a matter of presumption or conceit, but as a proud matter of fact. He swung his hammer without guile, yet with ferocity. To create a work that was better—no, the best. An unprecedented masterpiece. A divine revelation!! He would enter that
realm only one before in the history of Dwarf, his ancestor, had laid eyes on. His eyes reflected the back of that genius who had laid his fingers on creation—the alteration of concepts. He would reach that extreme none had approached in six thousand years. The man who kept piling up successes was the second coming of that sublimity. Everyone was certain he would be the next chieftain. Amidst all this, the man was hurling invective at a strange kid who was following him around:
“Hey… Get lost already, would ya, fockin’ brat?! You’re gettin’ in the way of my work!!”
“I’m not getting in the way, I’m not. I’m seducing my future husband, I am.”
The one contradicting him as if it was nothing was, at the time, a little girl. The one who called herself his future wife.
“If you think I’m getting in your way, that just proves you have feelings for me, doesn’t it, Uncle? Doesn’t it?!”
“Niecey, you’re gonna stand there winkin’ and blowin’ kisses at me like some bloody fool? I’ve feelings, harsh feelings!”
She was the precocious daughter of one of his older stepsisters, and she’d taken an inexplicable shine to him.
“I ain’t got no interest in some kid who ain’t even got any hair grown in yet—can’t bear to look at ya. Piss off,” he commanded.
The child shuddered at the man’s sharp one-eyed glare.
That was that. Everyone kept their distance from him. His eye had the gift of ending the conversation. Even children always grasped the point that he lived in a different world…until then…
“H-how do you know that I’m smooth?! Have you seen it?!”
But this child shuddered because she suspected he had looked at her naked. Incidentally, this was the fifth time this exchange had occurred. In other words—
“You peeped on me?! You licked me all over with your eyes, how can I get married now, you should take responsibility, and then I’ll be the wife of the chieftain, what a way to marry up, it is! Come, come, come, Mr. Sir? If you’ll marry me, I can show you my body aaany—”
“I can see from your face you ain’t got no beard, all right?! Don’t blush. Why are ya strippin’?!”
“Ah!! No, I don’t want to be the wife of some pervert who lusts after children, I don’t!!”
“Listen to me, will ya?! Wait, didn’t you just say you were seducing me? What do you want?!”
No matter how he tried to get rid of her, she kept coming. The man clutched his head.
—The hell’s with this fockin’ brat? His niece had a strange way with words. But more than anything, it was his own sense of discomfort that confused him. Never having experienced failure or discouragement, the feeling was altogether unfamiliar to him. It would be a while before he realized it was his first experience of anger.
“…Listen, Niecey. I’m a fockin’ genius. And that makes me a bloody fine man. You followin’ me?”
“Ah! S-so you mean, when I marry you, I’ll be a fine woman?!”
“Argh, that ain’t it at all. This is the problem. You ain’t good for me, is what I’m sayin’.”
Back then, he had concluded thus:
“You’ll never be a fine woman.”
“…Uh-huhhh… What is a fine woman…?”
“First of all, she’s an adult with hair. You’re out of the question. And she’s a woman who fits me. Let’s see… So first, she has big boobs. And then, if her spirit-arm craft ain’t at least on my level, I ain’t messin’ with that, either. Otherwise, hmm, she’s damn beautiful and damn chaste and damn sexy as far as I’m concerned. That’s what it means to be a fine woman.”
“…Uncle, that’s just a fantasy woman, it is.”
“Rngh?”
“I-I—I mean, there are no Dwarves with big boobs, there aren’t! And everything after the ‘Otherwise, hmm’ is exactly what my aunts told me virgins fantasize about, it is! Uncle, are you a virgin? By the way, what is a virgin?!”
“Shut up! What’s wrong with an outta-this-world man wanting an outta-this-world woman? Those fockin’ sisters of mine!!”
And then:
“Heh, you’re hopeless, you are. I’ll just have to become a fine woman for you, I will.”
……Suddenly…
“In another thirteen, I’ll be an adult, I will. I’ll be downright bushy, I will!! I’ll be beautiful, and oh so chaste, whatever that means, I will! Then you just have to get me sexy, and that’s that, it is!!”
…the child whose pale blue eyes sparkled as she spoke started to feel extremely dissatisfied.
“I’ll do my best to make spirit arms like you, I will. If you just give up on the big boobs, I’ll be such a fine woman, right in front of you! And I’ll help you stop being a virgin, I will!!”
She smiled as if to ask: So what is a virgin? He thrust back feelings he didn’t understand himself—
“It ain’t happening. Such a good-for-nothin’ ain’t ever gonna get how to make spirit arms.”
…And that—
was the man’s first misreading…
“……A good-for-nothing…? …What? You mean me…?”
…What? What’s with those teary eyes like you can’t believe what you just heard?! The man felt ever more uncomfortable.
“Wh-why nottt? I-I’ll d-do my best, I will.”
“Your best ain’t gonna do it…!! Why can’t you see?!”
Ah—the child truly didn’t understand.
Dwarf was a race that created exactly what it imagined. But she didn’t see that she didn’t see what he saw. She’d never even imagined she might not have talent. The man stood bewildered as to why that was so uncomfortable for him.
“…I…I just don’t—understand, I don’t… A-after all…”
She rebutted between sobs.
“…Uncle, you don’t understand why I don’t understand, you don’t!”
And at last the man had his answer.
“U-Uncle—you can’t overcome the limits of your own imagination, you can’t!!”
“R-really…I’ve already surpassed your imagination, by being unimaginable to you, I have. I’ll make a spirit arm that surpasses you easily… S-see, I’ve won the argument, I have!”
…Indeed…the man himself did not understand the child. He couldn’t imagine what she was thinking, what she was feeling, what…she was crying about… The man she admired over all others had told her she was good for nothing. But she argued against that absolute pronouncement and declared that she’d yet overcome it, weeping and despairing while her eyes burned with blue fire. It was that paradox that baffled the man who never strayed or erred:
…He feared that unimaginable child…
…The man had been born with outstanding sensibilities. They grasped even that divine realm only his ancestor had seen. And thereby he became the first in history to reach the extreme that in over six thousand years no one had been able to approach.
And then? What next?
The man could only imagine following in the footsteps of his ancestor, but still he had a hunch. Given all this, what was it that his ancestor had seen before he reached this realm?
He couldn’t have been a normal Dwarf. He must have been different, something unreadable, incomprehensible, unimaginable… Rather like that well-endowed lady his ancestor was said to have loved…or—
“I—I promise I’ll make a spirit arm that surpasses you, I do.”
—like the paradoxical child declaring this irresolute resolution—
“…Arright then. Go make a spirit arm that surpasses mine and bring it back here.”
—to overcome six thousand years of Dwarven stagnation…and the limits of sensibility—
“I’ll be here waiting for the damn fine woman who can beat me. It’s a promise.”
—to become a damn fine woman.
The man and the child joined pinkies in a solemn oath. He didn’t understand what was meant by her eyes, which looked up at him holding back tears. But he decided that, until he understood, until he was surpassed—he’d be the finest man imaginable…to be a good match for such a fine woman.
But the child fled…
She was still a paradox, while he still did not understand her at all, running even as he chased. The days and months passed idly—until one day…
…the man fell right into the trap of two strange Immanities. The otherworlders were winning while running from their past. The contradiction made the man sure: These two would know why the child ran.
…And his hunch was proven right. However—
“…A damn ham-fisted resolution… I was the one running, huh?”
—as their consciousnesses melded and the man touched the soul of the child from back then, he laughed at himself. He’d been called out on his limits—and he himself had run from overcoming them.
And from trying to imagine why the child had cried that day. Her eyes, heavy with unease, had sought—
—someone to be her place of belonging, to take her fumbling hand as she looked up to that sky where she knew she couldn’t fly…in that darkness as deep as her will. That was all… The man shouldn’t have waited to be surpassed. He should have sought with the child a way to surpass his limits.
“… Really? Is that really how it is? You were running? Are you sure?”
In their melding consciousnesses, the sarcastic laughter of a young man interrupted their thoughts.
“You think falling into the junk heap with Til and becoming like Shiro and me is not running? You think that’s being right? Yeah, maybe it is. But maybe it isn’t.”
Was the man running from his tab? From the paradoxical child who hoped for what he couldn’t imagine? From his paradoxical self who tried to understand a child he couldn’t? Chasing after the child who fled against his sensibilities that told him it was impossible, going so far as to put us on the hook…
So, what’s the difference between running and running from running…?
Partie 9[edit]
And so…the impact that shook to the surface left the cave. The force that connected the parts of the massive body ceased, and pieces of metal fell like hail. Through the whirlwind of dust walked a man who carried an unconscious girl. A rusty man. His mithril had lost its luster due to spiritual overload, his hair and his beard now rusted over… But strangely it seemed to be the true form of a man with the surname Drauvnir. It seemed proof of the way of life of a fool, using and abusing himself to overcome himself, not knowing what would happen, unafraid of overload—the only one to overcome the limits of his race…
I won’t let her die. The man had sacrificed his frame and overcome his limits to save his niece. But then suddenly—seeing her unconscious in his arms yet unwilling to release her hammer, looking genuinely happy, her chest rising and falling dramatically in sleep, smiling—
“……Ha…ha…! Haaa—ha-ha-haaa…!!”
—the man at last collapsed, like his broken soul sword, spread-eagled over the ground laughing.
“…Ahh… My fockin’ niece beat me good… The future is hers… I’ve lost…”
Yes: Veig recognized his defeat. He looked up to the heavens—and at last, he and all the Dwarves watching the broadcast—
—saw…the sky…
An unknown sky, inconceivable underground…yet they saw it. That of which Til had spoken—just as that which had closed off the sky before had broken, for the first time in six thousand years, it was pried open—that which lay beyond the high blue sky…
“…You feel that, Veig Drauvnir? You see how small you are, how shitty your taste?” asked one of the shadows peering down at him. The shadowy figure glanced at the group that Jibril had saved the moment Veig’s core had broken.
“You gotta fight with people on your level. Sorry, man. You’re just not up to playing me yet.”
Ah, what a small man he had been. Veig looked up at Sora, seeing in him a very different kind of man.
“…Small boobs, big boobs, even humongous boobs; fake boobs and real boobs… They are all boobs…”
A big man… Such a big man. Sora eyed him calmly.
“If you claim to love boobs, how can you speak of right or wrong? Speak of love.”
The big, big man’s voice was so clear you could hear him all the way to nirvana.
“To reject boobs other than those of the uniform ponderous size you favor as fake, and to impose this view on others…”
No censure, no blame, no scorn or spite could be heard in his voice…only the sound of a man who had obtained enlightenment and imparted to the world the truth.
“To speak to such a soul is less than my soul is worth.”
…Dost thou find it wonderful? Then may it be wonderful. No one can violate thy freedom to so find it. Then why, in speaking thy feelings, shalt thou denigrate others’? Indeed…
“Ideal tits? They’re perfect if you work on them? Ahh, how small, how small!!”
It was he, Veig, who had lacked confidence. Whereas this immeasurable man, as vast as the sky, had stood from the beginning far beyond Veig, on a higher plane.
…He was one truly great virgin. Yes…
“If ya want ideal boobs, you’re not gonna have a chance unless you have the guts to go for the woman who goes way the hell past your ideals, are ya?!”
Ah…it was just as his fockin’ niece had said. The child that day had already surpassed him…and now she’d become a fine woman who surpassed his imagination. Sora smiled at this, too.
“…Yeah. It was my limit to pursue mere perfection.”
Veig felt he’d seen for the first time what that child kept yearning for. She hadn’t been looking at the birds. From the very start, she’d been looking at the sky in which they flew…
“…Ah, finally I can see what my fockin’ niece saw.”
That sky one wished for and longed for and pined for and yet could never imagine: that which he’d always pursued…the ideal big tits that surpassed the perfect… Ah, yes…
Bwoing…
Veig gazed innocently at Til as she slept, her rising and falling chest—her humongous boobs. Tits of such excess as to look a little unbalanced, allowing statuesque beauty to crumble. He smiled at this ideal he’d finally found, an ideal beyond limits. He was happy……
Partie 10[edit]
Indeed… Only two in history had seen that divine realm. A third who had opened the door without being able to see it was responsible for this by-product of a successful failure. In the E-bomb shell had been placed two false ethers to conceptually resonate.
“Hey—th-these are heavy; I can’t even stand! ‘Big’ doesn’t even describe these!”
“You see, Dora, this is the conceptual rewrite of ‘big boob(?) essence’—”
“Analysis: Bust value of woman of unknown name. Provisionally categorized under handle ‘megatits.’ Very niche support.’”
“What are you talking about?! These are going to turn back, aren’t they? I can’t live like this!”
“Why, I’m fine if we don’t turn back, insofar as I’ve happened to match Chlammy. ”
“You must be joking! Why do I have even less now?! I won’t tolerate having no boobs! Hey, Fi, saying your small boobs match me, are you indirectly dissing me?! Give me back my boobs!”
“Query: This unit’s bust provisionally categorized under ‘ample bosom’… Questioning conceptual rewrite of ‘big boob essence.’”
“You see, it is not ‘big boob essence’ but ‘big boob(?) essence’—”
And there the ladies cavorted, their boobs changing randomly. Exactly as in the experiment four days earlier, except that this time it worked without an explosion. The conceptual rewriter used Lóni Drauvnir’s “big boob essence” along with one other false essence. Yes, just the same thing had happened as four days ago—instead of an explosion, it was its by-product. In other words:
“To summarize, it seems to be as in the experiment of four days ago, when, according to the sublime teachings of my masters, I engraved on unprocessed essence a seal identical to that for the big boob essence and activated this unidentified essence,” Jibril rehashed for the two who hadn’t been there. “I posit that a two-way reaction with the big boob essence
has generated a composite conceptual rewrite.”
Indeed…the principle was unknown. No one even understood how conceptual falsification worked. Thus, even Jibril was unable to explicate or elucidate this incomprehensibility. But she described it in words in such a rough manner as was possible. So:
“In short—the conceptual rewrite is in the form of a question: ‘Are these big boobs?’”
“These clearly cannot be described as big boobs!”
“Yes, you see, it is ‘big boob(?) essence,’ such as to make everyone ask, ‘These are big boobs?’”
……
Partie 11[edit]
“For the record, this is the first and last time I’m gonna play Cupid for anyone, all right?!”
Sora paid no attention to the commotion. He took the hand of his sister, apparently the only one unaffected: Big boobs? Where?
“For God’s sake, I’m still updating my years alive and without a girlfriend!! And now I’m supposed to help some d00d land a heroine?! And not just any heroine, but the one and only—the real thing—the brown legal Loli monster girl!”
“…I hope you find…happiness.♪ That’s one heroine…out of the running…”
The siblings walked away. Veig heard them loud and clear. He grinned softly at the sleeping face of his niece, who still smiled happily in his arms.
“…Ho… Bitches, I’ve heard your answer… I feel your soul…”
There was something the otherworldly siblings had never spoken of to the end. They hadn’t put that answer into words, or even returned it in their souls. Indeed…
“I was wrong to question you. Thanks for showin’ me…the sky…”
He got the sense that if they could beat this game world, they could say they’d fled to win… So:
“Lemme help ya build the sky of your future. Let’s be bosom buddies.”
They’d overthrow this game world, its rules, everything. They’d beat the world. Just you wait.
We’re coming for you next, friggin’ Earth…
Références[edit]
Revenir au Chapitre 4 | Retourner au Sommaire | Passer à l' Épilogue |