Early DAR Vol. 5 Chapter 19 Part 2
Added 2025-10-31 15:28:00 +0000 UTCFull title: Starting a New Life for the Discarded All-Rounder
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Translator: Airis
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âAnswer me properly! Die!!â
The crossed knives stayed locked as the female knight drew the sword at her waist with one hand and slashed at Roa. With both hands already straining to hold off her dagger, Roa had no way to block that strike.
Yet, he didnât even try to evade it.
Just as the blade was about to slice across his neck, it stopped; suspended as if it had struck something invisible. Though nothing should have been there, a soft resistance met the sword and halted it. The knight pressed harder, but her blade refused to go any farther.
<Did you truly think Iâd send my brat into battle without protection?>
<Exactlyâ>
<Dummy!>
His familiarsâ cheerful voices rang out.
Unable to hear them, the female knightâs expression twisted in confusion and panic.
âWhy are you trying to kill me?â
âIsnât it obvious? You command eight ferocious magic beasts! Power that great can only be contained or destroyed. Since the Nereus Kingdom is trying to keep you, I chose to destroy you for my countryâs sake. Simple as that. Right, your highâness?â
She had been there when Dietrich had declared to Eileen that he was the prince of Nereus. Seeing him getting along with Roa, she must have judged that to be a threat to her nation.
If someone with overwhelming power sided with another country, killing them before they could was the most rational course of action.
At her words, Dietrich clenched his teeth in frustration and averted his gaze. He had never intended to bring Roa under his countryâs control, but anyone watching could have misunderstood.
Roa, however, never looked away from her. His eyes stayed fixed, quietly weighing her intent.
<Does she truly think a mere human kingdom could do as it pleases with my brat and us? Such arrogance.>
<Arrogance, thatâs your specialty, uncle.>
<Yeah, sounds like the usual you!>
Their carefree voices echoed, but no one reacted.
Roa was clearly protected by magic, yet the two still stood with blades crossed; her sword held back by a barrier, her dagger still pressed against his. Even if she couldnât harm him, no one dared relax.
Every member of Nostalgia stood ready, prepared to intervene the moment anything went wrong.
The five Gryphons still kept their heads low and bodies motionless; whether paralyzed by indecision or simply choosing to erase their presence to avoid getting involved, none could tell.
âWhich country are you from? Youâre not really a knight of the Perdu Kingdom, are you?â
At that, her expression clouded faintly.
Roa had suspected she was a spy from another nation.
Originally, he and his companions had heard rumors of combat drugs and theorized that Eileen must have obtained them from a foreign source. They had even speculated that an infiltrator from another country might have joined the Nemophila Knights.
Now, this same woman had stabbed Eileen with a knife and called her âuseless.â It would be strange not to think she was that spy.
âWell? You think Iâd answer that if you asked? Are you stupid?â
Her reply sealed his suspicions. She neither confirmed nor denied it, but a true knight of Perdu would have denied it instantly.
So she was the one who had given Eileen the combat drug, using her both as cover for intelligence work and as a pawn in her schemes. Perhaps all of Eileenâs reckless acts up to now had been guided by this womanâs manipulations.
Roa found himself feeling a flicker of pity for Eileen.
<If we think about it logically, the factions whoâd profit from turmoil in Perdu would be either Adad or the Northern Allied Nations. But Adadâs people are too hot-headed for such elaborate tactics. So if weâre talking infiltration or sabotage, itâs likely one of the small states up north. That regionâs crawling with sly, scheming bastards; plotting is practically their national pastime.>
âThe Northern Allied Nations⌠huh.â
Hearing Uncle Gryâs analysis, Roa murmured under his breath.
âMy, arenât you sharper than I thought. But fishing for answers wonât get you anywhere.â
Unable to hear Uncle Gryâs voice, the female knight assumed Roa was probing for information and replied with a mocking grin.
âLook⌠you realize thereâs nowhere left for you to run, right? Iâm also protected by magic; you canât kill me. So maybe⌠we could both lower our knives and pretend none of this happened? I promise I wonât harm your country or chase after you.â
Surrounded by his familiars and the members of Nostalgia, escape was already impossible for her.
Yet Roa still offered her a way out; a gesture that should have been worth considering.
For a brief instant, surprise flickered in her eyes. Then she glared at him.
âHow naĂŻve. Of course I canât agree to that. Youâre on friendly terms with Nereus; how could I ever trust you? My country wonât either. Besides, I never planned to survive this mission. Even if I escaped, Iâd be executed for failure.â
âThen run from your country!â
âI have a family. I wonât drag their name through the mud.â
ââŚâ
Hearing that, Roa bit his lip. He understood then that nothing he said could change her mind.
He had no words, no means to sway a person already resigned to death.
âOh, silent now? You just wanted to talk to get information out of me, didnât you?â
ââŚâ
Roa didnât answer. True, he had spoken to her hoping to learn something, but only to persuade her to stop, not to interrogate her. Now that he knew his words couldnât reach her, there was no point.
âSo thatâs it? Then Iâll kill you!â
Flames erupted around the hand gripping her sword. She had conjured a Fireball inside her own clenched fist. Doing so meant searing her own flesh, if not outright burning her bones to ash.
And if the spell detonated before she released it, the blast at such close range would kill her as well.
It was an attack made in full readiness to die, her final means to break through the magic shielding Roa.
If he dodged, her knife would strike. If he held the knife, he couldnât evade the spell. There was no way out.
The female knight swung her blazing fist down toward him.
âIâm sorry,â Roa whispered.
A faint chime rang out, âkin,â as her knife shattered like glass.
Fragments of silver-white mithril scattered across the ground.
âMy weapon was destroyedâŚ? But itâs mithrilâŚ?â
Someoneâs stunned voice broke the silence.
With her dagger destroyed, the force she had been resisting against vanished, throwing her stance off balance. Her flaming punch veered wildly off course, and she stumbled forward.
Roa, too, let his posture collapse, deliberately this time.
His knife slipped in cleanly, gliding toward her exposed neckâ
âand with a swift motion, he cut across her throat.

<Good grief, using that revolting magic again. If all you wanted was to destroy her weapon, you could have wrapped wind magic around your knife and cut it cleanly. Why smash it with some weird spell?>
Only the heavy thud of the collapsing female knight and Uncle Gryâs exasperated voice echoed through the space.
That was the instant the fight between Roa and the female knight was decided.
Time slipped on in silence.
Roa gazed wordlessly at the woman lying on the floor.
To him, she had been a stranger whose name he didnât even know; just another face among the investigation team, with whom heâd had no real connection.
And yet now, Roa stared quietly at her lifeless face, as if to imprint it on his memory.
<Brat, why did you finish it yourself?>
Unable to endure the hush, Uncle Gry addressed Roa with a trace of anger in his tone.
<You knew that trifling spell posed no threat before my protective magic, did you not? Left to herself, she would have self-destructed and died anyway. And with those sleepyheads around, even if killing had to be done, there was no need for you to dirty your own hands.>
When Roa glanced toward Uncle Gry, the Gryphon had his eyes shut and refused to meet his gaze, doing a poor job of hiding his irritation.
âYeah⌠but she was serious, so I thought I had to answer her seriously. And⌠burning to death looked like it would hurt.â
<Thatâs just self-satisfaction, brat.>
âYouâre rightâŚâ
Roa bit his lip and looked down.
The moment the female knight invoked her magic, the vision that flashed through Roaâs mind was Uncle Gryâs battle with the Greater Lich.
Back then, Uncle Gry had dirtied his own hands to grant the Greater Lich the very end it most desired. He had met that longing head-on.
Just like Uncle Gry in that fight, Roa chose to face anotherâs resolve directly and stain his own hands.
But he had no wish to say so and burden Uncle Gry with guilt.
So he said nothing.
âRoa! Sorry, but check on this womanâs condition. Iâve no idea how the top-tier potion is supposed to take effect, so I canât tell if sheâs actually healed right!â
âAhâyes! Iâll take a look!â
The one who called out to Roa, whose face had clouded over, was Kristoff.
He had been watching over Eileen after administering a Supreme Grade Magic Recovery Potion, the very one Roa had specified for wounds. As heâd admitted, he couldnât judge whether it was working properly.
It was also an act of kindness. Seeing Roa being scolded by Uncle Gry, Kristoff gave him an escape route. If Roa had a task, Uncle Gryâs grumbling would be held at bay for a while, and Roa wouldnât have to dwell on needless thoughts.
âYou bastard! Donât you dare complain about what Roa did with everything on the line!â
Dietrich leaped at the reclining Uncle Gry and, riding the momentum of his fall, drove a knee into him.
<Sleepyhead!? What are you doing, suddenly?>
<No complaining!>
<Donât bully Roa!!>
Piling on, the twin magic wolves sprang at Uncle Gry as well. From the way their tails wagged like banners, they were playing at least half in jest. They dropped onto his belly, reveling in its springiness.
<Waitâbratâs defenses still have my mana tied up, and I canât move worth a damn! Even the sleepyheadâs clumsy attack stings a little right now!>
With one human and two wolves mauling him, Uncle Gry squirmed to shake them off.
âWhat! This is our chance! Feel the weight of our long-nursed grudges!â
<Longânursedâgrudge!>
<Chaaanâce!>
Dietrich and the twin magic wolvesâRoo and Phiâhefted Uncle Gry up, flipped him, and pinned him on his back. Then they launched their âassaultâ on his unprotected belly.
âŚAn assault consisting of rough petting that messed up his fur and relentless tickling.
<Hold it, sleepyhead! Your bloodâs boiling after the fight and youâve gone funny, havenât you!? If you think youâll get away with thisâhey, donât touch there! That tickles! Twins, donât lick! And why are you licking too, sleepyhead!? Filthy! Stop it!!>
They were a writhing heap. The five Gryphons, who had been bowing their heads meekly, now stared round-eyed, aghast, as if witnessing something truly horrifying.
âBy the way⌠is Roa going to be all right?â
Abruptly, Dietrich paused and muttered in a voice low enough only Uncle Gry could hear.
<All right in what sense?>
âShh. Keep it down. I donât want Roa hearing.â
<This voice reaches only you, sleepyhead. Be at ease.>
That reminded Dietrich: when theyâd fought the Gryphon using dark magic, no one else had heard Uncle Gryâs voice either. Clever trick, he thought, but this wasnât the time to marvel at it.
âHe killed someone. Is he going to be okay?â
Unless one is an abnormal killer, taking a human life scars the heart. This world, where life is cheap and conflict constant, is no exception. Adventurers and soldiers simply learn to make their peace with it as they go.
For Roaâwho always worries about othersâthat wound would be deeper still. Even if there had been no other way, he might not forgive himself.
Dietrich feared exactly that.
Roa looked a little down, but for now, he seemed stable. If Dietrich walked over and asked, âYou all right?â Roa would answer, âIâm fine.â
But Roa rarely shows his darker feelings. He suppresses them so as not to worry those around him. Try to force it out, and stubborn Roa will never reveal his true heart.
Knowing that, Dietrich had no choice but to ask Uncle Gry, who had known Roa the longest.
Even then, he wasnât sure it meant anything to ask a magic beast who didnât bat an eye at killing. There was a good chance heâd get nothing useful back.
<Donât fret. The brat isnât that fragile. And itâs not his first time, technically. For a few days, he may not sleep unless he uses me as a pillow, but the wound will mend and heâll return to himself. Honestly, he goes and burdens himself with needless strain, a worrisome boy. He lectured me not to make him worry, and before the words are even dry on his tongue, he turns around and breaks themâŚ>
âWhat can I doâŚ?â
<Nothing!>
Without a beat, Uncle Gry replied.
<The brat is stubborn to the core. He wonât heed anyoneâs comforting prattle. Leave him be until he makes his own peace. Rest easy⌠Roo and Phiâs and my irresistible charm will soothe him properly. Thereâs no place for you, sleepyhead. Youâd only get in the way. The sight of your kind alone unsettles the heart. Donât go near the brat. Begone!>
âYou littleâ!â
Wearing a rueful grin, Dietrich started roughhousing Uncle Gry again.
âDamnâpoison!â
Roaâs shout cut him off.
All eyes swung to him.
He was bent over Eileen, checking her breathing, practically draped over her head where she lay on her back.
Perhaps because her clothes had been removed to inspect her wounds, Eileenâs upper body was bare. Catching sight of her bulging breasts, Dietrich quickly looked away.
<Dietrich, are you in heat?>
<Maaating seeeason!>
âI am not! Who taught you those words?â
Amused by his teenage-boy reaction, the twin magic wolves crowded his face and hooted at him. Roa and Kristoff, intent on treatment, showed no embarrassment at the exposed chest; they worked with sober focus.
Standing beside them, Bernhart wore his usual blank look, apparently uninterested.
âIt was on the knife⌠I should have suspected it.â
Kristoff muttered as he worked, though no one present had thought to suspect it. True, sheâd chosen to stab with a dagger despite having a sword; something that, in hindsight, could have signaled a hidden intent.
But thatâs the sort of thought that only comes after you learn the blade was poisoned. Predicting it in time wouldâve been difficult.
âHer breathingâs almost gone. Pulse is fading.â
âCan we save her?â
Perhaps feeling responsible as the one entrusted with treatment, Kristoff asked Roa with a grave face.
ââŚItâll be hard. Right now sheâs only alive because the potionâs effects still linger. Itâs holding things together by constantly repairing what the poison is destroying. Once it wears off, sheâll die.â
âThe antidote?â
âWe canât identify the toxin. Thereâs no time to analyze whatâs on the blade.â
Healing potions and antidote potions were, strictly speaking, different things.
However, they could be substituted for toxins that the human body could break down. By using healing potions to repair the parts damaged by the poison, it was possible to ingest more poison than usual without any problems.
In short, detoxification was performed by the bodyâs own power, and the healing potion raised the amount of poison a person could survive ingesting.
The poison Eileen took was either in quantities far beyond lethal even for a Supreme Grade Magic Recovery Potion to keep up with, or it was a toxin humans couldnât metabolize at all.
âIsnât there a potion that works on any poison?â
âNo! We already used a Supreme Grade Magic Recovery Potion. Her body canât take another!â
Roa couldnât help raising his voice.
He had downplayed the potion earlier since the other female knight had overheard, but this wasnât the time to worry about that.
Potions were not usable without limit.
Magic beasts, whose bodies accepted mana easily, were exceptions. For other living things, there was always a limit. Overuse led to mana sickness. Once that hit, no potion worked.
A universal antidote was also a top-tier potion. If they gave it after a Supreme Grade Magic Recovery Potion, it would almost certainly induce mana sickness and nullify the effect.
âSheâs a habitual user of combat drugs. The fact that the earlier potion worked at all was near miraculous.â
If they had administered it orally, it might not have worked. Because they sprinkled it on her body instead, the potency may have been damped just enough to produce a proper effect.
ââŚI see.â
Kristoff, who had been peppering Roa with questions, had nothing more to say.
Roa racked his brains. A life that might still be saved lay before him. Sweat beaded on his brow; he forgot even to wipe it away as he thought.
<Good grief. Thereâs no point in saving the likes of her.>
Uncle Gry muttered, exasperated.
âThatâs true.â
Still sprawled atop the flipped Gryphon, Dietrich agreed.
He bore malice toward Eileen; she had caused his own grievous injuries and the twinsâ abduction by the Gryphons. Until he knew the twins were safe, he had seriously considered killing her.
The members of Nostalgia seemed to feel much the same; none looked concerned for Eileen. They merely watched from a distance.
Kristoffâs agitation was tied solely to failing the task Roa had entrusted him with, not to worry for Eileen herself.
<That woman wasted the meal the brat worked so hard to make. That alone merits death!>
âThatâs a bit extreme⌠but if Roa wants to save her, youâll help him, wonât you?â
Dietrich flashed a toothy grin.
<Heâll manage without me. The brat isnât so incompetent heâd fail to act when someone with that expression is standing right there.>
Uncle Gry flicked his eyes in a certain direction.
Dietrich followed his gaze. There stood the other female knight, Evelyn, one of Eileenâs two subordinates, frozen where she was with a stricken face.
Betrayed by a colleague, and now her revered commander was dying. Her limbs trembled with despair; her complexion had gone deathly pale.
Tears streamed unchecked from her eyes. If she hadnât been bound and gagged, she would have been wailing and thrashing.
âUncle Gry, tell me about the Gaokerena leaves!â
Roaâs voice rang out.
<See?>
Uncle Gry beamed at Dietrich, smug. The uncanny timing, as if Roa had overheard, put a jealous twist on Dietrichâs features. He plainly disliked that Uncle Gry understood Roa so well.
âHuh? About what?â
<Nothing. Not your concern. You meant the Gaokerena leaves, yes? Are you certain about this?>
âCertain about what?â
The Leaves of the Tree of Life (Gaokerena) were something Roa had received from Puffy the Winged Rabbit in the Rabbit Forest, at a place called the Sageâs Herb Garden.
They serve as an ingredient for longevity potions, and even when eaten raw, they extend life.
Roa had been given ten such leaves, along with a trial: to discover their true method of useâknowledge no one living now possessedâas the trial of becoming a sage.
The title sage and ingredients for a supreme potion that one might never acquire in a lifetime. Exchanging that treasure for the life of Eileenâwho had never been on good terms with himâwas an awfully steep price.
<If I told you about those leaves, the sageâs trial would be forfeitâeven if what I gave you had nothing to do with the answer itself.>
âHuh? Ah, a game of chance, right. Just because I got the Gaokerena leaves doesnât mean any of that mattered for someone like me from the start. Theyâre preciousâyou only get them if you meet Puffyâso if I didnât use them when they were needed, theyâd be pointless.â
<âŚWhat? Brat, what did you just say?>
âSo it was a game of chance I could try once I met Puffy and got the leaves, wasnât it?â
<âŚ>
Roa stated it outright, as if it were self-evident. It did not sound like something he had reasoned out; rather, it felt as though he had never once considered completing the trial and becoming a sage.
True, Puffy had used the words âgame of chance,â but only to suggest Roa could take it lightly.
Yet Roa seemed to believe that anyone who met Puffy would receive Gaokerena leaves, and the âtrialâ came as a bonus afterwards.
<Brat⌠I didnât think your misunderstanding ran that deep. Because your self-esteem was so low, you twisted the words to fit itâŚ>
Uncle Gry stared at Roa like he was seeing the impossible. Puffy had chosen Roa for his ability and given him the sageâs trial. If anything, the Gaokerena leaves were merely a tool for that trialâan extra.
It was by no means something anyone could receive or attempt.
âThat didnât matter. Tell me, quickly! We didnât know when her condition would suddenly turn.â
<Poor Puffy⌠no, serves him right. He has a habit of cooking up tricky schemes. He ought to get burned once by someone those schemes donât work on. Wrecking his underhanded designs suits me fine, too. Hm.>
Muttering to himself, Uncle Gry closed his eyes and thought a moment. Dietrich and the twin magic wolves were still perched on his upturned belly.
Perhaps because he was thinking, they did not dare interrupt and watched quietly without moving.
<Brat, the Gaokerena leaves would save that woman. But there was a condition.>
âSomething I could do?â
<No. A condition for the sleepyheads, and for that crybaby knight who stood there beside the troublesome ladyship.>
Uncle Gry turned his gaze to the female knight who stood at Eileenâs side, tears streaming as she watched in anxious silence.
<Sleepyhead, could you take those two back to your country and keep them under watch? They knew far too many things best left unknown. Killing them would be quickest, but if that were an option, we wouldnât be having this discussion.>
At the word âkill,â Roa shot Uncle Gry a glare.
âI could⌠but you mean without anyone in my country finding out, right?â
<Naturally. If anything leaked and my bratâs freedom was curtailed, I would raze your nation, understood?>
His voice was quiet, and that only made his resolve all the clearer.
If even a slight disadvantage befell Roa, Uncle Gry would not hesitate to make an enemy of an entire country. Dietrich felt the same and had no intention of reporting any of this to the homeland.
<And you, Playboyâcarry my words to that female knight.>
âMe again? Get the leader to do it!â
The one Uncle Gry had singled outââPlayboy,â Kristoffâlet out a strangled protest.
He had been forced to speak for Uncle Gry once before and had found it mortifying. He had hoped never to repeat it.
<Sleepyheadâs words carry no weight; no one trusts what an idiot says. Roa is a child and wonât be taken seriously. A Playboy is best suited!>
ââŚThat was⌠admittedly trueâŚâ
âQuit casually calling me an idiot!â
Dietrich barked in protest, but everyone ignored him.
<Before that, bratâassume that womanâs memories were already shattered, yes?>
â!?â
Roa started at Uncle Gryâs words, then nodded at once.
<As I thought. Healing potions repaired the body only; the experiences stored within were usually lost. When breathing faltered and the heart began to fail like this, the brain would suffer damage as well. Even if its functions were restored, the memories would be gone.>
A healing potion returned damaged parts of the body to a normal state. âExperienceâ was not among those parts.
Muscles and nerves did not regress to a blank newbornâs state because they balanced with other intact areas, but the brain was delicate and complex. That she might lose only her memories was a near miracle.
<Then, Playboyâthe conditions we set for that female knight: emigrate to your country, no contact with prior acquaintances, and absolute silence about anything seen or heard here. They had already been shunned by their Countâs house and thrown away here. If the troublesome ladyship returned without her memories, both of them would likely be disposed of. Theyâd live happier if they fled abroad and were considered dead. Explain that upon them, they would have no choice but to agree.>
Hearing Uncle Gryâs terms, Kristoff accepted that such measures were necessary if Roa and the others were to live in peace from now on, and he began persuading the knight.
Along with Uncle Gryâs message, he added that Dietrich, a royalty of Nereus, had been endangered.
Even if it was a foreign realm, harming royalty meant a capital crime. Evelyn, grateful that Eileen might be saved, nodded and accepted the conditions without resistance.
âAnd then, Uncle GryâŚ?â
<Crush the leaf and have her drink the juice. That alone should suffice. Gaokerena leaves expunged the baneful things within the body and prolonged life. In other words, they possessed the ultimate anti-toxin aspect. Supposedly, a poison that causes aging accumulates in the human body with the years, does it not? Well, that was not the leafâs only property! To save that woman, you would have to use every leaf you carried, and the brat would lose his chance to research them for life! Puffyâs vile ambition would be crushed!>
Whether from excitement or glee, Uncle Gryâs body trembled mightily. Dietrich and the twin magic wolves were bounced high atop his belly.
<Once we returned to town, the brat would be an official adventurer! The twins would earn their names! The chicks would be under my command again! Puffyâs worrisome scheme was foiled! I got to romp to my heartâs content, the sleepyheads suffered just enough not to die, the brat gained a touch of real combat, and we conducted assorted human trials with various potions! On top of that, we eliminated some countryâs spy, settled the nuisance rampaging ladyship who spawned trouble, recovered the hostages without letting them die, and the so-called âinvestigation teamâ had no fatalities! Behold! A perfect, happy ending! Fuhahaha!>
At the pealing laughter, everyone but Uncle Gry wore a complicated look.
The five Gryphons even shook their heads in despair. For them, being called Uncle Gryâs subordinates might have sounded like a death sentence.
The buildings were shattered, corpses lay strewn, and many were injured; calling this a happy ending seemed a stretch.
Because no one had yet explained matters, even Nostalgia had not realized Uncle Gry and the twins had deceived them into a needless fight. Once they learned the truth, they would surely be furious.
It was hardly a result anyone could accept with a smile.
âUncle Gry, you werenât reflecting on any of it, were you? Of course you werenât. Youâre repairing this building yourself, since you broke it. Naturally. And youâre treating every last Gryphon, then helping replenish the materials we use. Also, no meals for a week.â
<What!? Why!? >
No matter how long he scolded, Roaâs anger at being tricked had not fully cooled.
Even so, not everything had been bad. Roa let out a long sigh and smiled.