“Huh? Who are you? This is the residence of House Resclave, state your busi—!”

“Tasianna!”

“Yes, my lady. Out of the way!”

““Woah?!””

“Grimnir!”

After Tasianna blew the two beastmen guards standing before the gate away with wind magic, the ones behind it became agitated and fled towards the mansion while calling for reinforcements. I noticed the mana barrier surrounding the place with [Mana Eyes], realizing it probably protected the place from outside attacks as well as fortified its gate and walls.

Still, I kept moving forward after calling for Grimnir. With a loud “Got it, lass,” he activated parts of his unfinished “Manatech armor” prototype. From his sabatons, wind blasted out of them, shooting Grimnir forward as he readied his blasthammer. With flames bursting out from it, a single swing was all that was needed to blow the gates wide open.

“Halt!”

Beastmen guards equipped in decent armor and weapons, similar to a soldier’s not a town’s guard, rushed out. They were ready to attack us. Despite yelling out for us to “Halt,” they didn’t leave us a second to actually respond before their archers shot at us.

“Saori. Ellaine,” I calmly ordered.

Ellaine conjured up multiple brown magic circles, materializing [Terra Wall]s to block their attacks from reaching us, whilst Saori whistled, summoning her shadow pack to capture all the soldiers with mana threads.

[“Master! We are done!”] Rajah came sprinting over with his siblings after the job was done, looking up at me with the wish to be praised. I used [Unheiliger Angel] to create a floating platform for them to stand on, petting them once they were high enough where I could do it.

As we walked up the stairs, Tatsuya and Kyouya rushed in front of us to open the mansion’s doors, causing the five of us to look at them in confusion. They looked at each other awkwardly for a second, before we thanked them for it and continued forwards. It did seem as if they were acting like my servants for a moment.

With the members of Aurora and The Misfits trailing behind me, excluding Haruka who decided to stay in the RV, we ventured through the mansion. The servants and guards tried to stop us, but Tasianna was actively making it hard for them to even move by freezing their legs to the ground.

Now that I look at it, most of them are beastmen, huh? I noted, only seeing a few human servants, although all of them were female and fiercely loyal. It really seemed like they were willing to risk their lives for their mistress.

“Stop.” After a while, a familiar foxian man in black armor appeared before us, his lifeless eyes turned into a scowl. He had his sword ready to strike us down, but lowered it in shock after he saw me. “P-Princess Hestia?! And… You?!”

He darted his eyes over to Asaka, slack-jawed as she and I walked past him.

“We will see your mother and have a talk. Come, show us the way, Mister Parilostro,” I demanded without even looking into his eyes.

“Halt!” However, he was still adamant about resisting. “You are intruding into our home! Even if you are part of the imperial—”

“Do not make me repeat myself!” I snarled at him, causing him to shiver as I released my [Draconic Aura]. The others of Aurora also gave him the stink eye, finally persuading him to act, otherwise this might become violent, and not in his favor.

As we barged into Reajaen Resclave’s office, the surprised foxian woman looked nervous for a second before widening her eyes in shock at our appearance. The guards probably informed her there were intruders, but not who they were, leading her to react just like Parilostro. Like mother, like son, I guess.

“P-Princess Hestia?! W-Welcome.” She tried to stay calm but I could see the anxiousness and confusion in her eyes. “To what do I owe you the honor of—”

“Cut the crap, Ms. Reajaen!” I silenced her attempt for small talk before talking out an item from my storage. “What the hell is this?”

I slammed the item on her desk, revealing it to be a weirdly-shaped manatech. Four mana batteries could be seen on it with an empty slot for a fifth. It had multiple tube openings on it and looked a bit like a heart to me, although only slightly.

“Whe— you? Ahem, what is this?” Finally having the time to settle down, the veteran merchant’s agitation vanished as she assumed her poker face demeanor.

“Don’t try to talk yourself out of this, foxian!” Grimnir blurted out with a massive frown, anger clear to see. “How and where the hell did you manage to build this, huh? I know the designs and techniques used on this thing. I would always with this type of mana wiring! They were the signature style of the artificer Broggart Luedbrumdar!”

Grimnir then pulled out the mana battery we got from the Layavete cartel, displaying it for everybody to see. “This, however, was not made with my cousin Broggi’s techniques. This is a failed imitation! The others were definitely made by a dwarf, but not this one. Speak!”

Grimnir slammed the desk, causing it to crack as he neglected to take off his manatech gauntlets. Reajaen’s son quickly grabbed him on the shoulder, but Saori pulled off his arm. “Sit back and watch,” she warned him before releasing him.

“…” Reajaen remained silent, trying to assess the situation. However, this wasn’t the time for that.

“We know all about it,” Asaka came forward and allowed her fenrir onnikais to come out and create a purple shield around her. “The beastmen village in the east and your involvement with them. About you being the true leader of the Resurrection, and also the secret you hold there. You can’t hide onnikais that easily when someone can speak with them.”

“Faemancer…” Parilostro mumbled under his breath, prompting Asaka to glare at him. She was still holding a grudge on how he almost killed her.

“We also know the secret with your son, Lady Reajaen. Or, should I say, the puppet your son is controlling,” Ellaine pointed at the armored foxian man. “The Sin of Sloth. The ability for a demonkin to control bodies like a puppet. We saw them. Two Parilostros in two different locations at the same time.”

“One tried to kill me.” Asaka scowled.

“And the other burned down the slave auction at the docks with members of the Resurrection. The one they attacked was owned and operated by Senator O’Bloom, wasn’t it?” Daichi added.

Tatsuya nodded. “And those beastmen slaves, you sent them to Eshreen Village, correct? We saw your hidden village where you kept those slaves.”

“You freed them from slavery,” Kyouya then took over. “But you were keeping the onnikais you created hidden in the back, guarded by your son and members of the Resurrection.”

“…” In the face of all our accusations, the foxian woman remained silent, letting not an emotion escape her facade. This was a departure from our first meeting.

“If you want evidence…” I took out a thick book from my storage. It was one of the many things we got from the Resurrection loot Saori and the others recovered from Senator O’Bloom’s hidden bandit base.

It and the heart-shaped manatech were the reasons why we immediately rushed over here to confront Reajaen Resclave about her connection with the Resurrection.

“Then this should suffice, right? Lady Reajaen, I ask you to explain yourself right this instance. I want the entire picture and why you did all of this.”

Reajaen took the book I handed to her calmly, opening it up and inspecting the first page. “My dearest Haven, this is the first page of many containing my plan for vengeance for the death of my dear Resclave!” was the first sentence. This was a dairy.

“…” She closed it.

“I didn’t read any further… Who is this Resclave and why does he share your last name?” I asked reservedly, noticing a change in her mood.

“… My love eternal.” She placed the book in an empty spot in her bookshelf, perfectly sliding it in with her other books. “… So you know about our plans? … Members of Aurora?”

“… Why is your son a demonkin contractor and why are you fighting against O’Bloom and the Church of the Edjurl?” I asked, hoping she would finally be cooperative.

“… Revenge.” Was her only answer.

I nodded, already knowing this from her diary. When I asked her to continue, she shook her head and sat back down on her seat after cleaning up her bookshelf.

“That is a private matter, Princess Hestia. I understand you wish to know what is going on, but even then, I cannot give you answers I would dislike to give.”

“But you will.” Tasianna stomped the floor as she approached Reajaen from the sides, glaring at her as she pulled out the four mana batteries from the manatech item. “You are at fault… You sent those fae hunters! You killed Princess Schuri, foxian!”

Mana clouds began to stream out of Tasianna’s body. It seemed she used [Elvenize] as when the cloud dissipated, Tasianna assumed her [Elvenize Lv. 6] form. She became shorter and now was showing her fairy features like her wings and shortened ears.

Reajaen widened her eyes before closing it as if she was praying. “… I apologize,” she spoke solemnly.

“You apologize?!” Tasianna snapped. “Humans might have been condemned in the past for what they did to us faefolk, but that doesn’t allow you beastmen or anybody the right to perform such abominable actions on us! My Princess Schuri will never, ever come back because you hired people to hunt us!”

Tasianna’s voice cracked as tears began to flow down her face. I went over to her, caressing her shoulder in sympathy.

“I hated humans. All of them! Because I thought only a human would be terrible enough to do so… But…” Tasianna suddenly threw the mana batteries she had to the ground, to which Reajaen jerked up from her chair, falling onto her knees where she barely managed to catch all four. She cradled them in her hands as if it was her most precious treasure.

“You did this. You did this to create this manatech. You sacrificed how many faefolk lives? For revenge? For what? You will tell us why and, after this is done, you will answer for your crimes. YOOU! You have gone far enough without paying for your crimes!”

“Mother!” Parilostro’s arms suddenly split open right in the middle. One aimed at Tasianna and me and the other at the rest.

However, having been warned about this by Asaka, Ellaine and Tatsuya snapped his arms shut, preventing the portable mana cannon from gathering energy to shoot. Saori quickly dashed to his back and forced him onto the ground, wrapping his arms up with threads.

“Urgh!” he groaned.

“Stop! Please!” She jumped up, pleading to Saori to stop before returning her attention to Tasianna and me. “I-I… Please.”

She bowed her head. I didn’t know if she would speak, but I wasn’t about to torture her with her son in pain. Saori nodded to my intentions and placed the wrapped up Parilostro on a couch before opening the window, making sure the other “copies” of her son wouldn’t ambusd us.

Although she wasn’t calm in any manner, I still pulled Tasianna back from Reajaen, letting the latter sit back down. As I joined her on the other side of the desk, I repeated what I said before. I wanted to know what her deal was.

“… Senator O’Bloom, no, before he killed his own father, mother, and siblings to take his place as the head of his house. Harrione O’Bloom, he killed my lover, Resclave.”

Reajaen suddenly took off her coat and pulled down the back of her dress. As Tatsuya, Kyouya, and Grimnir were forced to look away by us girls, Reajaen turned around, revealing a large scar on her back. Although it wasn’t visible anymore, I could only wince as I guessed what it was.

An emblem inside a cage. The mark of a slave tattoo.

“He was my slaver and tormentor back when I was still a debt slave in the Folschreck Empire.”

I frowned. “You were a slave? So your last name and your wealth—?”

“Yes, I was never this rich. My parents were daywagers in the Folschreck Empire and they sold me to pay back a debt as I was their youngest child. Full-bestial beastmen are constantly belittled and bullied while free, but as a slave, we were desired by the affluent humans. They see us even more as beasts than our human-skinned relatives, you see,” she explained, giving off a slight teacher-like vibe, as if she was lecturing me on beastman racism.

“Hold on.” However, I was more interested in what she just mentioned. “You just called yourself a full-bestial beastmen, right? But you’re like me, right now. More human than beast in appearance.”

“Thank you. It was what I wanted.” She touched her fair skin. If this were Earth, people would have thought her of a middle-aged woman cosplaying a fox. “… But I am even happier that O’Bloom hasn’t noticed me yet. It was worth shedding myself, even if it meant I could never look like my son ever again.”

I rotated my body, looking at Parilostro. I couldn’t believe Reajaen was telling such a flat-out lie. Her son shared a lot of features with his mother, so what was Reajaen talking about?

“… Then what about your son? What does he have anything to do with all this? Don’t try to lie to us about him not having any connection with a demonkin. We know and have our methods to detect it. We also know you are hiding the demonic item you stole from O’Bloom and his group in your hidden village.”

“The Church of the Edjurl…” she mumbled. “So you know about them? Which means, the reason why you flew out of the city was for that? You went to O’Bloom’s base under the mountain arch?”

“Are you specifically trying to stall us for some reason or why aren’t you answering my questions?” I was starting to get annoyed at her. “You haven’t objected to being from the Resurrection, but you haven’t confirmed it either. You are asking me questions instead of answering mine. Lady Reajaen, this is getting tiring! I am not here for small talk. I want clear answers. I want to know if you truly are either an ally, neutral, or… an enemy.”

My eyes stared into hers as if I was gazing at her soul, looking for any signs of lie. At this very moment, I had to know if she was a real threat to us or not. We were exposing things by going at it directly, but that was ‘cause we needed a lot of answers. There were so many things we needed to know.

This was precisely why I told Mother to stay back home. Things would have already turned ugly if she had joined in. Also why Haruka decided to avoid coming.

“… And what would you do with that information if I were to say yes or no, Princess Hestia?” She glared back, letting my intimidation not affect her. “You are a priestess of Aurena. Do you know what is currently circulating in the underworld? In my sphere of information? That a demonkin killed Saintess Eshe, your friend. I know you are no friend of demonkins or those associated with them.”

“Ahh, so you’ve done more research into me than I thought.”

“Precisely why a no-name slave was able to reach the status of a senator in the city where money was everything. You are resourceful… or die.”

“And you sure were resourceful enough to try to ally up with me at first. Try on a pretense and then probably use me as any other tool for your plans. Oh, and then you attacked my friends. Were you that annoyed I rejected you? Heh… you sure had me fooled with that amicable nature of yours, Lady Reajaen.”

“And you are being too modest, Princess Hestia. When I ordered my people to attack the Layavete cartel, I told them to not attack you. None of your friends were hurt in that attack, only the people I wanted gone,” she said without flinching.

“Oh, you finally admitted it to being the Resurrection leader. Thank you, and…” I tapped my claw on her desk, digging a small hole in it. “To answer your question, if you aren’t our enemy, I won’t do anything to you. Although you will still have to answer to Tasianna for what you did. That is a problem between you and her.”

“We aren’t allies of demonkin, but we aren’t stupid,” Asaka spoke up, also nearing the ends of her patience. “We know who we need to put down first. And that is the Church of the Edjurl. They are actively aiming for us, and they will take you down as part of that. The onnikais at the village told me enough of what you and your son have been doing.”

“So I offer you an accord.” I took over again. “You want revenge on O’Bloom for killing your lover, and I need to destroy him since he’s a threat to my friends and happiness. We finally have something in common to rethink that deal you spoke about during our first meeting.”

“Hehehe, but you don’t need me to squish one tiny insect, Princess of the Dragons.”

“Oh no, I don’t. I agree with that, but you know I have an ulterior motive to all of this. I still need to make allies within Estralia.” I pulled out two pieces of parchment. “The opinions of King Drangleic and his seven dukes on which senators we should ally with. In the other, the confession of Neville, your mole in the Layavete. Honestly, about the latter, I had thought you only hired beastmen or women as your workers.”

“After what O’Bloom did to me, I admit, I do prefer the company of women over men. To feel safe. But this is a world where even people would seek the aid of demonkins to further their goals.” She then read the papers, widening her eyes at what was written on them. “Me? In such a good light?”

The general consensus from the Artorians was that all the senators were slimy and laced their words with ulterior motives; however, this was nothing new to a noble. As the heads of their respective houses, politicking was part of their everyday lives.

As such, a good ally to them was not a person with good intentions, but someone whose goals correlated with theirs without overstepping their boundaries. If they were also good to boot, then that was a nice addition. We needed someone to attain the presidency in Estralia, but they shouldn’t be prone to backstabbing us.

As such, all eight Olden Money were out of the window. They were too profit-oriented without a moral compass or anything. That left us with the “lower” senators, composed from the representatives voted by the people. All of them had ambitions, but most of them didn’t have a plan on how to execute them when they approached King Drangleic.

All except Reajaen.

“Heh… you know, I only talked to them about you. That was it. I never mentioned an alliance or anything. I was simply networking,” she admitted.

“And that was why I trusted Neville’s statement about. You are modest in your spendings, only using it when you have to. You are loyal to the beastmen companions you took in, where he even stated you weeped when you heard one of your bases was exterminated. And, most importantly for me, you are a stark opposer of slavery. One of the very few in this city, even if you couldn’t be bothered to help human slaves.”

“… Ahhhh, now I see. This accord of yours, it’s your way to understand if I can actually be trusted or not. You want a president you can trust, even if they have connections with a demonkin? But, Princess Hestia, your fairy friend isn't enthusiastic about it, it seems.”

I looked over at Tasianna, who was still glaring at Reajaen with a look of death.

The room became chillier once she spoke up, “And you will answer for them, monster. But until then, our goals align.”

“… Hehe.” A giggle escaped her mouth. A smile formed on her face, suddenly lifting away the tense atmosphere. “You are far more interesting like this, Princess Hestia. Your first impression wasn’t as good. I expected more from a dragon. You sounded too meek.”

“My job isn’t to be a princess all the time,” I countered while sighing in annoyance. “My main job is an idol and leader of my hunter company. I would rather leave these discussions to somebody else if I could.”

“Ahh, I understand. But you have talent with how you can use your dignity as a princess and the ferociousness of your species to your advantage. Hahaha, maybe this can be interesting. Allying with you, I mean. Well, if I can survive after all of this…”

Ahhhhhhhhhh, finally it’s oooooooveerrrrr! I hate this. I let out a small sigh through my nose as I started to relax on the chair I was sitting on. I really hated these tense situations.

“To answer your question—”

“Mother!” Parilosto protested, but his mother simply raised her hand.

“Enough, my son. It is better this way. If we can have an ally for this, then we can save the lives of our fellow Resurrection. They will hand down their lives for you and me. That is the goal of the Resurrection, after all. However, let us not, and hear them out for now.”

“But if we accept them, you will die! That blue-haired fairy has a bloodthirsty aura. She seeks revenge just as much as you do.” He continued arguing but his mother only shook his head.

“And I deserve it… For your life, I would sacrifice even my soul. Every action has a consequence, and this will simply be my reward for everything.”

She then turned around to me, finally ready to spill the beans.

“Now, where was I? Ahh, your question. No, my son isn’t the demonkin contractor.”

I raised an eyebrow.

“I am,” she admitted. “I spoke with the demonkin Prince of Sloth on the night I was to give birth to Parilostro after managing to escape one of O’Bloom’s nightly ‘pleasures’ when he was still young enough to visit the Empire at his leisure. I was still a slave, so I didn’t have a midwife to help me nor was there a stranger kind enough to lend a hand for a beastman slave. I gave birth, and, from it, Parilostro was born. However, he was small and fragile. My dear Resclave’s only memento was about to die on the same night he was born.”

I felt my chest tighten.

“ ‘Do you need aid?’ was the first thing I heard as I wept for my sad, pathetic life and how my only son would soon die before I could spend any of my years with him. I looked up. The silvery-white moon of winter shone on the horned person, revealing the hand he offered me. I took his hand. He freed me. Strangely, I never asked his name once, always calling him Master out of habit.”

The Prince of Sloth was supposedly a talented artificer and alchemist according to Reajaen. He brought her to a rundown shack he was using as a base while he stayed in one of the Empire’s cities.

There, he forcibly removed the slave tattoo without harming her manapaths. A feat even experienced runic tattooists couldn’t do - the only known safe way they knew was to destroy the slave contract binding the tattoo.

“He gave us shelter. Fed my son and I without expecting any compensation. All he asked me was to never disturb him while he worked or slept. He did all of that, and when Parilostro experienced complications that would lead to his death, I made a contract with him to save my son. The Prince of Sloth created an artificial heart for my boy, which pumped a demonkin’s blood through his veins.”

“Hold on, but that would mean your son is a demonkin now, no? It’s been too long.” Ellaine blurted out.

“That is correct. As you guessed, this body is simply a puppet, a puppet my son made for himself to ‘move’ around while his real body was trapped in his bed. He is a demonkin in the form of a foxian, with the power to control puppets within a certain distance.” Reajaen smiled while her son frowned in pain. “But, the prince warned me. My son was still young, and the heart would deteriorate in quality as he grew. A heart made for a toddler wasn’t adequate for an adult. His skin is always pale as a ghost, and his real body sleeps almost for the entire day.”

“And this is why you have this heart?” Grimnir wondered. “But you didn’t make this. This was made by tazongn hands.”

“Correct. I asked a dwarf for help. While I only learned alchemy from the Prince of Sloth, he left the blueprints for the artificial heart for me to use.” She then pulled out the blueprints, letting a shocked Grimnir and Ellaine read them. “As you can see, they are very hard to read, even for an experienced artificer.”

Ellaine nodded slowly, still flabbergasted at what she was seeing.“T-True… I can make the intentions of the plans out, but some of these techniques… I cannot replicate them.”

“You aren’t even a year in your training, lass,” Grimnir comforted her. “Then, who was the artificer you called upon?”

“The local head locomotive engineer of the train station, Jadhund Heimhunter.”

“Heimhunter, huh?”

“Do you know him, Grimnir?” I asked.

“Aye, I do, lass. One of the top members of the train guild. He used to train under one of the original manatech engineers who worked with the Revolution Queen on the train. He’s that man’s successor, which also makes him one of the best artificers you could find in the Ankor-Nazta.” Grimnir then scoffed, shaking his head in disappointment. “And you are telling me that man is helping you? Ha! He more of a zuekluk than I am.”

“Maybe.” Reajaen nodded. “But Master Jadhund was our savior. He made the foundation of the heart for us in addition to creating the batteries. He even taught my son the art of manatech. And this saved us, as the heart wasn’t finished and we even broke one of the batteries during a test. Despite knowing our predicament, he still hadn’t told anybody about our secret.”

“The honor of a tazong, foxian.” Grimnir crossed his arms, keeping his eyes shut as he continued. “But I could guess the one your son made. It was a feeble attempt to copy my cousin’s technique… Heh, the famous Jadhund Heimhunter used Broggi’s techniques, huh? If only you were still here to hear it, cousin…”

It was a touching moment, but there was still something I didn’t understand. The same something that Tasianna wanted to know.

“Then why did you need to hunt down my people? If you needed mana, hire a mage. You had enough money.”

“… I have no excuse there. Once again, I apologize.”

But every additional apology only caused Tasianna to become more agitated. As such, Reajaen just continued to talk.

“The Prince of Sloth told me I needed a good base for the batteries. They would continuously refill themselves within my son’s body, but to make him healthy, we needed to fill the batteries with quality mana. He suggested elementals or fairies.”

Reajaen knew as an alchemist she couldn’t do this, as draining a fairy of their mana would mean their death. Something Reajaen initially wanted to avoid. As such, when she first became a member of Estralia’s alchemist guild and established the foundations of the Resurrection, she employed Davison. A known fanatic on evolving the human race.

With Reajaen’s wealth and Davison’s ideas, the two made a good duo trying to find a better, accessible mana source for the batteries. Dragons were out of the question, leviathan’s as well, and many high ranked monsters weren’t enough for them. They even tested on lesser faefolk, but the amount of mana a spirit had compared to a fairy meant they had to use more spirits to fill a single mana battery.

After many tests and out of patience, Reajaen finally listened to Davison and employed fae hunters. And, before the first test could be completed, she stopped it. For the fae hunters never returned.

“…” Tasianna was silent. This was probably when she and Princess Schuri were captured.

Afterwards, Reajaen fired Davison when they got into an argument about it. Davison joined O’Bloom after the Resurrection began making moves, where Davison was given full leeway on all of his abominable experiments. Advancing the technology of implanting bombs inside a person — something he worked with Parilostro with — and also mutating monsters and people.

But, most importantly, this was when Davison joined the Church of the Edjurl. He became one of their pawns and was tasked to further the demonkin’s goals to take over Artorias. He was also tasked to free the demon trapped inside a ruin dedicated to the fenrir Belzac. As we know, this demon was Klea’Hatma.

When I mentioned the black liquid potion to her, Reajaen shook her head. Apparently, this was a personal project for Davison, as Reajaen never heard that O’Bloom knew about it. I couldn’t help but let a sigh of relief out. Davison’s demonification potion was far superior to the ones the troll shaman and the demonkin of envy I killed in Artorias used.

“And all of that was for my revenge and the survival of my son,” Reajaen ended. “I chose a new name and even had the Prince of Sloth change my appearance with the help of a demonkin of envy just so O’Bloom wouldn’t recognize me. I came to Estralia, bringing my knowledge of alchemy to kickstart my wealth. Afterwards, I used the conversations I overheard from O’Bloom to become a successful merchant in this city. My greatest enemy was also my greatest mentor…”

She became silent after that, laying in her chair as she stared up at the manatech chandelier.

“Now, I believe I have spoken enough. What is your judgement, Princess Hestia? May I accept your accord? Am I worthy enough to help you, help me?”

“… What is your end goal after O’Bloom is dead? What is your goal as the president?”

“To abolish slavery. To abolish the Olden Money system. To make Estralia a place where beastmen can live safely.”

I closed my eyes.

‘Not every demonkin is like that.’ Fuck you, you fucktard, Eithalr. You are a major reason for everything that happened in Artorias, so don’t come at me with your self-righteousness. Next time I see you, I will kill you… but, you were right, at least for this.

At least some demonkins have some compassion.

I stood up.

“O’Bloom will attack you in a week. He will come for what is his. Call your people, Lady Reajaen. Get them ready.” I then snatched the heart and the mana battery her son made. “Until we deal with them, I will keep them with me. You have no complaints?”

“Do I even have a choice?” Nonchalant, that she was.

Turning around, all of us began to leave the room.

“Aurora, it’s time to hunt down our enemy.”

“““Yes, Princess Hestia!”””

Holy crap, can you guys not all be so cringy?

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