Summoned by Monster Girls - Chapter 164
Added 2025-08-09 08:00:05 +0000 UTCArriving back in the bunkroom, the fact that I had Jane tucked into my side still was the only thing that saved me from being tackled by all three of my girls.
âGood to see you two are okay,â Rieka murmured. My princess had taken the time to change into her regular clothes since she had come back.
âAgreed, I feared the worst for a bit when I saw you carrying JaneâŠâ Shayla murmured, her wings fluttering in concern. The moth-winged woman was still wearing her nightgown, the thin material clinging to her body like a waterfall of silk.
âLiam, I was so worried!â Kassandra huffed, slithering in a broad circle around me as I carried Jane over to the bunk beds and set her down on the top bunk of the combined set.
Kassandra had been as good as her word and dragged two sets together to combine so that she had plenty of space on the bottom bunk. My girls usually piled together there with me, used to sleeping so close during our camping.
âWe are both fine,â I said, but I didnât look away from Jane. The mouse kin womanâs round ears were trembling slightly, but she met my eyes with a brave face, so I leaned in to give her a light kiss.
âIâm fine, Liam,â Jane said once we separated. âI just⊠those were people I killedâŠâ
âAnd that is exactly why we are out here,â Rieka said firmly, slipping over to stand next to the bunk beds and look up at Jane. âKnow that those people were coming with intent to pillage, steal, rape, and burn this town to the ground. They do not deserve sympathy any more than other bandits.â
âI know, itâs just⊠different now,â Jane said in a small voice, her ears wilting to either side.
Rieka, my beautiful wolfish princess, reached out a hand to Jane in comfort. It was clear from the way her ears fell to either side that Rieka was remembering her first time having to take the life of someone. It hadnât dented my girls up as much as it had me when Iâd killed for the first time, but they still knew the pain.
âItâll be okay, Jane. Just focus on the fact that they canât hurt anyone anymore now,â Rieka insisted and Jane gave a damp-eyed nod.
âWhat happened out there, Liam?â Kassandra asked more firmly as her circling wound tighter and she used the opportunity to climb my body.
Unlike the other two, Kassandra hadnât bothered to throw any clothes on besides her cloak, so when she worked her way higher and that cloak spread to reveal her bare chest, I ended up suitably distracted.
âLiam!â Kassandra laughed, slapping at my hands as they wandered over her curvy body. âNot right now!â
âCan you blame him?â Shayla teased with a soft smile, the moth womanâs antennae wiggling in amusement. âI mean⊠look at yourself.â
Kassandra puffed out her chest in pride at that comment, then squealed in surprise when my hands landed on her breasts once more. She broke into mad giggles before wrapping both her arms around my head and hauling me face-first into those soft mounds.
âWell, itâs clear that Liam isnât bothered by what he had to do,â Jane commented dryly. Since my mouth was currently muffled by delicious mounds of flesh, I responded in the only way I could and gave her a thumbs-up, which got a snicker from Jane.
When Kassandra finally released me from my plush prison, I wrapped an arm around her waist to support herâand give her tush a squeezeâwhile waddling over to sit at the table with my lamia-belt still wrapped tightly around me.
âWhile I wish Kassandra would at least put a top on,â Rieka said with a long suffering sigh. âWhat can you two tell us happened out there?â
Jane shot me a pleading look and I nodded, accepting the task of explaining the bulk of what had happened.
Shayla took a seat opposite me at the table as well, while Rieka remained beside the perched Jane. In as simple terms as I could, I filled them in on what had happened. Jane chipped in a few details about what had happened before Iâd arrived, but left me to talk about the bulk of it.
Apparently, the raiders had been spotted trying to sneak through the trees to the wall with their ladders. Jane had been patrolling nearby and immediately started casting spells while the soldiers fired their bows into the raiders. It was only when they lit their torches and she saw how many there were that Jane had sent the urgent summon to me since she didnât know how quickly the other soldiers would arrive.
When I mentioned that the flame jet wasnât actually a spell, but the product of a weapon like the gun Iâd demonstrated for the girls once, all four of them went pale.
âLiamâŠâ Rieka murmured, but I held up a hand to stop her.
âI promised you before that I wasnât going to bring those kinds of weapons here, and I intend to stand by it. Butââ
ââthere are other sources of such things. And Liamâs people had to have invented them at some pointâŠâ Shayla interrupted, the moth womanâs antennae curling inwards in concern while her wings fluttered behind her.
âWhich is my concern,â I replied honestly. A gesture with one hand pulled the âflamecasterâ out of my Dimensional Pocket and it landed on the floor between us with a thunk of metal on stone.
Here in brighter light, and with the time to study it earnestly, it was a contraption.
The âwandâ was roughly rectangular, with a bent stock like a rifle and a wide lever along the bottom that would activate the sprayer. The whole thing was made of a mixture of iron and brass, with corrosion marking the front half as well as soot marking the mouth of the sprayer. Pipes and wires ran along the exterior, intermixed with the runes carved into it. A hunk of red crystal set near the nozzle glowed brightly, and I could see heat waves rising off what I was sure was a fire-aligned mana crystal.
Connecting the âwandâ to the tank was a flexible metal tube made up of dozens of small segments that articulated and flexed. The tank itself was a pot-bellied thing that made me think of a propane tank, but squashed so that it was more oval than round. A half-dozen different gauges were mounted all over it, and the tank itself looked like it was made of bronze as well with runes carved into it.
All in all, it looked like someone had designed some kind of steam-punk version of a flamethrower, but never bothered to build a carry-strap or backpack for the tank itself.
âBe careful with it,â I warned when all four girls leaned in to look closer. âItâs still active and can fire. You just pull that lever on the bottom half and it sprays jets of fire.â
Rieka grimaced, kneeling to study the weapon carefully.
âI worry,â my princess began before pausing to chew on her bottom lip. âI worry that this is like the other weapon you showed us. The most terrifying part about that gun was that it didnât require magic to operate. It just needed the chemicals, right?â
âYeah,â I answered with a frown of my own. âThe fact that guns are able to kill so easily and donât require excessive training to be dangerousâthough they become infinitely more so when you do have that trainingâis part of what ruined a lot of power structures in history.â
Riekaâs frown only deepened at that statement, but I kept talking because I wanted my girls to fully understand.
âThere is a saying back home,â I continued slowly. âGod may have created man, but it was Samuel Colt that made them equal. Colt was one of the big names in designing the firearms that acted as class equalizers.â
âFirearms?â Shayla asked quietly, her curiosity about the term enough to break through the somber mood.
âItâs a term used for specific weapons that expels a projectile that is propelled by a controlled explosion,â I answered simply. âLearning to control that explosion took centuries, since it usually killed those who fucked it up. From there it was all on material science to improve the materials to handle greater stresses, and the designers to troubleshoot problems.â
âSo what are you saying, Liam? That someone out here is designing those âfirearmsâ that you mentioned?â Rieka asked, the worry obvious in her voice.
âNo.â
My rapid and negative answer clearly surprised the princess, because Riekaâs head whipped up, her ears pointing and focusing on me while her tail began to wag slowly.
âWhat?â
âItâs simple,â I said with a shrug, pointing at the item on the ground in front of us. âConsider who I took that off of. There is no way that these people are actually designing and producing technology to the level that they are able to make this.â
âThat is relieving.â
Valdaâs voice coming from the doorway made me jump. Having a lap filled with Kassandra prevented me from whirling about, but the dwarf lamia in my arms still squeaked in surprise when my grip tightened and I ended up pinching the handful of ass that Iâd been petting idly while I talked.
âI take it that this is what you wanted to talk to me about?â Valda asked, stepping through the cracked door and closing it behind her. The lizard-folk woman then turned and leaned back against the door, crossing her arms under her full chest, pulling the scale armor tighter to her body and shelving her breasts inside the flexible armor.
âSome of it, yes,â I answered with a shrug.
âElaborate then,â Valda ordered, her gray eyes flinty as she studied the weapon where it lay.
âA lot of it is suppositionââ I started to say, but Valda cut me off.
âI am capable of reaching my own conclusions on something. Speak what you are thinking and your reasons.â
I sighed but nodded, taking a moment to organize my thoughts before I spoke. This was made harder because Kassandraâs muscular serpentine tail started squeezing me gently as she settled into my side again, but I didnât protest.
âValda, what you might not be aware of is the fact that weââ I indicated my bonded companions with a nod of my head since my hands were occupied with Kassandra, ââhave been finding and studying human-era ruins for the last several months.â
Valda made a curious noise in her throat, but didnât go beyond that, so I continued my explanation.
âIn that time, weâve found several very very old sites that had signs of advancements far beyond what Cortha currently has.â
âYou are thinking of the⊠what were they called? Trains?â Kassandra murmured and I nodded my agreement with her thoughts.
âYes, exactly my thought, actually. Those trains were a mixture of magic and technology from the bits and pieces we found in them. I still have no idea what the hell a samoflange is, but the fact the ones we found were made of mana-infused silver tells me that they had some special purpose.â
Turning my attention to Valda, I could tell that the scaled woman was waiting for me to elaborate so I obliged her.
âTrains were a method of mass-conveyance back on my world. They were integral for the development of many nations and are still considered critical infrastructure even hundreds of years after they were first set up. But the point is, these trains were apparently designed by the humans on this world, however long ago it was that they existed.â
âThousands of years,â Jane murmured from her perch on top of the bed. âItâs the closest guess that we can make based on the records available. The human-age ruins that are above ground are so worn and eroded that they are basically gone. Only those in caves or underground survive with any real chance of retaining their history.â
âSo you are thinking this is some human-age weapon?â Valda asked, nodding to the bizarre flamethrower. âDesigned thousands of years ago and somehow able to function even after all that time?â
âI know, it sounds preposterous,â I started to reply, but Valda cut me off again with a shake of her head.
âNo, it sounds quite probable, actually. Far more likely than a people who have barely mastered the beginnings of the blacksmithâs craft could design and build something like that,â Valda said, indicating the weapon on the ground. âI was listening for a bit before I came in, and I think there is something else you havenât mentioned yet.â
âWhich is?â I asked curiously and Valda was quick to supply the answer.
âThe design of that item is unique enough that it would stand out, and the Ironclaw clan knows other metalworkers in our section of the world. We supply the ore for most of them. But that style is not one I am familiar with. That and one other factor: the fuel.â
I nodded along with her words and couldnât really come up with a way to argue it. Flamethrowers back home operated on heated oil or diesel, at least from what I remembered. And while they had things like cooking and lamp oil here, I was fairly sure that it was mostly animal or plant based oils. I was fairly certain that you couldnât just load olive or fish oil into a flamethrower, but that would take some research back on Earth to know for sure.
âSo youâd need a confluence of factors then,â Rieka was quick to interject into the conversation. âSomeone to design the thing, someone who has the knowledge and skill of fine smithing to create the components, and a skilled alchemist to refine the fuel?â
âUnless theyâve come up with some way to do it with magic,â I said with a shrug. âI canât discount that since I donât know it well enough to say for sure.â
âAnd there is no way the tribes would have created something like this,â Valda said firmly. âTheir magics arenât advanced enough for it, and they have barely started to master iron craft.â
âWhich makes the chances of this being something they were either given or found far higher,â I finished for her, getting a nod from Valda.
âThis isnât the first of these that weâve seen,â Valda said after a moment of silence. âIâve personally seen one other and seen reports of them on several fronts. There are also other strange weapons popping up, but they are rare. Maybe no more than one to a band, and not all the raiding bands have one.â
âWell that is fortunate,â I said.
âExplain,â Kassandra demanded, poking me firmly in the cheek with one finger.
I didnât have to explain, because Valda had apparently already thought of the issue or guessed my thought process.
âIf they concentrated them together, then these weapons could turn the tide on a front. Imagine if all forty-odd raiders had one of these. Sure, theyâd have still lost people, but I guarantee theyâd have made it over the walls.â
That thought sent a shiver through me that Kassandra responded to by pressing herself tighter to my side.
âThen we have an important issue to consider,â I said, looking up to meet Valdaâs gray eyes.
âWhere are they getting them from,â Valda said firmly. âIf these are some kind of relic from the human age like you think they are, then there is a limited supply of them available. The rarity amongst the raiders tells me that is likely. But if they are being supplied somehowâŠâ
âThen the Ironclaw, and by extension the Coldeye Queendom has an enemy that is playing proxy,â I finished for her.
âI donât know for sure which I hope for more,â Shayla whispered, drawing attention to her. The shy moth woman wasnât looking at us though, instead she was staring into the middle distance thoughtfully.
âShayla?â I prompted when she didnât elaborate or even move after a handful of seconds.
The moth woman twitched, her antennae shooting upright to stretch out to their full length before tucking in close to her head warily.
âSorry,â Shayla murmured, blushing faintly while her wings fluttered softly behind her. âI got lost in my thoughts there.â
âItâs fine,â I said reassuringly. âBoth sides of that coin have downsides, so itâs understandable to be worried.â
âI know that I am at least hoping that they are artifacts,â Valda said with a businesslike snort through her nostrils. âThat means that if we can find and eliminate all of them, the threat is dealt with. If another country has developed to the point that they can pass out weapons like this to cause problems, then this is only the beginning.â
âI will hold to that hope as well,â Rieka murmured, her eyes falling back to the metallic shape of the flamethrower on the floor.
âBetter question,â I asked, getting everyoneâs attention pulled to me. âWhat do we do with this one?â
âI would like to take it and have it studied by our smiths, as there are a number of things that might be learned from studying such delicate work,â Valda said slowly. âThe other ones that Iâve seen reports on were all damaged during the fighting or were reclaimed by the raiders before they fled. This is the first one Iâve seen captured in one piece.â
âThatâs because Liam hit him so hard, the asshole didnât have time to do anything,â Jane said with obvious pride.
I shot the mouse-eared woman a smile and a wink, getting them returned a moment later. What was more encouraging was the fact that my little scholar was smiling and rosy-cheeked once more, no longer as pale as she had been earlier.
âI didnât want to risk getting hit with that thing again,â I said with a laugh.
Those words were a mistake, because all five women in the room immediately focused on me with the intense gaze of hunting hawks.
âLiam,â Kassandra hissed in my ear, her voice silk-wrapped iron. âWhat do you mean by being hit with it, again?â
âAh⊠uhâŠâ I said intelligently while glancing between each of the girls, they all had a mixture of thunderous and concerned expressions on their faces. âWell, about thatâŠâ
I was saved from being interrogated by the girls by Valda, who blew out a long breath and pointedly changed the subject.
âAs I was saying earlier, I would like to claim it and have our smiths study it, but Liam claimed it after defeating the wielder. Meaning that itâs his by right of combat.â
âItâs Janeâs, I was summoned by her and claimed it at her command,â I said almost immediately, making the mouse-eared woman twitch in surprise.
âWhat? I⊠YouâŠâ Jane protested, stuttering several times in such a cute fashion that I had to strangle the urge to laugh.
âLiam,â Rieka cut in. âIt might be best if this was not studied. While these barbarians might not be able to replicate the metalwork, having a pattern for something like this might lead to certain developments.â
I could see the worry in Riekaâs eyes, and I could totally understand her fears. But there was another half to the issue that she might not be considering, so I gave voice to that instead.
âBut studying it will let you know how best to combat them too. Handing over an advantage like that might not be the best choice.â
âLet me study it first,â Jane said, finally finding her voice and sitting upright on her bunk. âIâve been studying human ruins for a while now, and seen all the different ruins as the others. If this is human-era, then Iâll be able to confirm that by studying the runes on it.â
âThatâll at least eliminate one of the possible origins,â Valda said with a nod. âJust be very careful with it⊠You saw it in action earlier, so you know how dangerous it can get.â
âOh, I promise Iâll be careful,â Jane said firmly. âItâs going to go directly into my dimensional bag and stay there when Iâm not actively studying it. And I plan to go sit in a very rocky area before I study it.â
âBe careful of the tank,â Valda cautioned. âThe other report I have of something like this says they are explosive.â
âYeah,â I interjected. âIf itâs anything like the ones Iâm familiar with, the contents are under pressure, and if the tank is breached somehow, either by dropping it or a seal breaking, then the whole thing can explode.â
âAh, and I bet that is why you made it my problem then, right Liam?â Jane said dryly, the mouse kin woman clambering down from her perch to stuff the weapon into her pouch and out of sight.
âNope. You just had the unfortunate fortune to be the one who summoned me. Meaning that you get all the credit for what I got up to,â I replied with a cheeky smile.
âSpeaking of things you got up to,â Kassandra murmured, the edge back in her tone now. âCare to elaborate about that earlier comment, about being hit with this weapon?â
âUhâŠâ I said intelligently as my girlsâ amused expressions all turned into glares again.
Comments
Things are just getting started⊠Potential edit: Several of the missiles clattered against my body as the quick-witted amongst the attackers took aim at the screaming creature that fell towards them with murder in âmyâ eyes. Several of the missiles clattered against my body as the quick-witted amongst the attackers took aim at the screaming creature that fell towards them with murder in âtheirâ eyes. (?)
The Foreign Traveler
2025-10-18 04:01:06 +0000 UTCLiam could also take the flamethrower directly to the Queen. Theyâre also forgetting that theyâll make technological progress from the ruins theyâve already uncovered.
Adam
2025-08-09 15:07:43 +0000 UTCmagical ones wouldn't need it. But Liam was referencing nonmagical flamethrowers from like WW2, which used pressure to atomize and propel the fuel. So he's assuming (rightly or wrongly) that since the tank was usable, it should be under pressure.
M. Tress
2025-08-09 13:26:19 +0000 UTCWhy does the tank need to be under pressure? With magic I would think you could have a control nozzle. The nozzle could compress the fuel to spew out a mist up through a stream. Heck could even send out various size globules. Could be really devastating if send out a fuel mist then send out an ignited globule.
dcmartini95
2025-08-09 13:14:21 +0000 UTC