《The God-Kings (Mass Isekai)》Arc II : The World Adapts - Juliette V
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Arc II – Births and Blessings
Juliette V
PA 0 (3rd month)
The past three months had been much less hectic than the first week.
Perhaps that was partially her own fault. Early on, she’d been focused on securing her own position and creating a buffer zone between herself and her enemies, but now that she didn’t have anymore rivals in the area, she’d decompressed a bit. Instead of fighting, she’d spent the last few months developing what she already had.
Her people had deforested the local area, replacing their old fur tents with wooden cabins and huts. They’d set up a wall around the village, at first by simply stacking logs on top of each other as high as possible, but recently they’d started expanding it, adding a second layer and some ramparts between them. They’d gone from just serviceable to looking actually functional.
The most impressive addition had been a bridge from their own side of the river to the other.
It was a massive construct, requiring nearly as much wood as all the cabins in the village. She couldn’t get any accurate measurements of the river, but it had to be at least 5 kilometers wide. So instead of building it directly at her village (where the river was at its widest) she instead built it a bit further upstream, using the natural islands of the river to build a series of smaller bridges across the river.
It was originally built as an easy way to get across the river without boats, since she’d still been having trouble making those at the time. The other side of the river wasn’t that different from this side, but it was crucial for scouting, gathering resources, and eventually expansion.
As far as her scouts found, the south was unending swampland. While it wasn’t impossible that there were other God-Kings hidden in the swamps, there was too much risk of disease and wildlife to investigate too deeply. Instead, she was looking further down river and north, where there were more normal forests and plains.
In terms of other villages, she’d found two—one to the far west, which said they followed a God-King, but who apparently didn’t live there, and one which sat to the far east, which had apparently killed their God-King after he’d offended them.
The first was an immediate existential threat, as it implied that there was another conqueror in the area. The second was a reminder that just because she was now immortal, didn’t mean she couldn’t get dethroned. She had to keep her people happy if she didn’t want to meet a horrifying end. Bread and Circuses, and all that.
The threat to her west was worrying, but she wasn’t willing to throw the first punch. She had no idea how powerful they were, and she’d learned her lesson the first time. Running headfirst into the unknown was more dangerous than it was worth—she’d do some more scouting before she delt with them.
She’d also been working on other, less physical matters. For example, she’d been working further to develop a writing system, which had gone… well, it had gone alright.
It turns out it was a long, long process trying to create a written language from scratch.
For one thing, Juliette was speaking a completely different language from her people. And while that normally wasn’t a problem, due to the translation magic, it still meant they weren’t speaking the same language.
This showed the most when she tried writing.
Earlier on, she’d tried writing letters into the mud. Then she’d had some of her people try to read it—which was her first problem. Apparently, despite auto-translation being a thing, none of that mattered if they didn’t know how to read in the first place.
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So, before she could write, she’d have to teach her people how to read.
The one positive that she’d figured out was that she did translate writing—she’d tried writing a bunch of English and Spanish words and watched as the words instantly translated in her mind. It was interesting, because despite knowing instinctively what the words meant, she still saw them as written in a foreign language. It gave her a bit of a headache when she tried to focus on them too hard.
Basically, if this worked out, then everyone would be speaking Chinese but writing in French.
So in between teaching Wei—her future scribe—how to write, she’d spent the last few weeks trying out different ways to write. She’d started with trying to carve onto stone, only to realize that while carving simple letters into stone was simple, rocks large enough to be useful were too heavy to be used. Then she’d gone for a wood approach, carving words onto wood planks. And while that worked, storage was another issue—wood rotted and molded easily, and she’d lost the last month’s records after a thunderstorm last week.
They needed to invent paper, pronto. And find somewhere to store it.
So many problems, so little time.
But until then, she still had to find a way to write. So now she was on carving large shells—turtle shells, to be specific.
They had a lot of turtle shells. Too many. They ate turtle soup every other day—she was sick of turtles.
Ruining their shells with her bad carvings was incredibly cathartic.
Taking a deep breath, she held up a small bone stylus in one hand and a turtle shell in the other. She began slowly applying pressure, moving back and forth to create a line. A smile grew on her face as she managed to carve an N… A… N… T…
Crack
Another shell cracked under her stylus.
She chucked the remains across her room with an enraged scream.
“Is everything alright in there?” the guard outside her cabin called, sounding concerned.
“I am—” she took a deep breath. “I am fine, Qian. Thank you.”
“Of course,” Qian replied as though it was obvious, his reassuring tone helping her calm down. “You’re the Queen—how could you be anything but? But the Queen shouldn’t have to bother with meaningless trivialities—if there’s anything you need me to do, please let me know, and I will complete it post-haste!”
Juliette couldn’t help but smile. Qian’s Qian-ness always helped cheer her up. “I appreciate it, Qian, but I’m alright. Really.”
“As my Queen says!”
The smile was still on her face as she picked up another turtle shell, pressing her stylus into it to carve another—
Crack
The stylus snapped between her fingers.
--
Juliette hummed, dipping her fingers into the orange paint on her lap.
She needed an outlet. Something fun to do so that she didn’t go insane bashing her head against problems that didn’t want to be solved.
So she’d turned to art.
There weren’t many types of art available in the stone age. One type was sculpture, but pottery required a skill she didn’t have yet, and she was trying to get away from stone carvings, not subject herself too more of it. However, a much more technically difficult type of art soon revealed itself to her.
Finger painting.
Yes yes, laugh it up, the Queen was so inept that the only art she could do was finger painting, har har.
Honestly, at first it had embarrassed her too much to even consider. Wasn’t finger painting for children? How humiliating that an adult was so inept she was forced to return to paint like a child!
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But fingers were the only paintbrushes these people had, and any attempts to create modern ones had ended in failure, so she’d bit the bullet and started finger painting.
And then it turned out it was really fun. She got why kids loved doing this, she was having a blast!
Juliette hummed, dipping her ring finger into the white paint, pulling it up to the new building they’d finished yesterday. The wall was as smooth as possible so that she could paint on it easily. With a slow flick of her wrist she highlighted the antlers, before bringing up her pointer finger—covered with brown paint—to dot a pattern across it.
There weren’t a lot of colors available right now. She had red—from blood—white—from ground bones—brown and orange—from mud—and some other shades of yellow and green from plant life. Mixing them together expanded her palate, but not much. She never would have guessed how much she missed the color blue.
Sticking out her tongue, she added the final touches to the painting. Standing up, she took a step back to look at her artwork.
It was… okay. She’d tried painting a deer—she’d seen one with an absolutely massive rack of antlers recently, and she found herself just itching to paint it. So when she needed a break from shattering turtle shells, she came out here to paint.
She frowned lightly, annoyed at all the little mistakes she could see. The head was too small, the body was awkward and unnatural, and the antlers she’d taken so much time to work on looked far too big for its head.
“Oh wow!” a childish voice exclaimed next to her. “What’s that!”
Glancing to her side, she smiled as Min and Chaoxing—Qian’s children—leaned over from where they were painting. Min, the older girl, looked to be making a large fish, while Chaoxing, the younger brother was… well… his scribbles looked like a snake! How auspicious! A burgeoning artist right here!
“A deer,” she smiled down at him. “I based it off one I saw earlier. Have you ever seen one?”
“Once once,” he hummed, wriggling onto her lap. She was forced to push away her paints to stop him from spilling them. “It was very big! Father killed it, and we ate it later. It wasn’t very good.”
“You don’t like it?”
“Fish is better,” he told her as if it were a truth of the world.
“Hm, indeed, fish does taste good,” she nodded back, just as solemnly.
“Could I…” the other child asked, causing her to turn to look at her. The little girl was blinking owlishly at her. “Could I help?”
“Hm,” Juliette hummed, glancing back at the painting. It was already done, but… “Have you ever seen a bird?”
“A bird? Like a sparrow?”
“Yup!” she smiled, scooting back, Chaoxing giggling as he was bumped around. “Why don’t you try adding some bird wings to it?”
“Bird wings? Deer have those.”
“Nope!”
“But then why add them?”
“Because it’s fun!”
Min looked at her like she had just bestowed some profound wisdom on her.
Juliette patted the ground next to her, and soon the two of them were adding all sorts of weird appendages to their animals.
Heh, no matter how bad her painting was, the act of painting was fun.
These people had art—some of the women had beautiful singing voices, and while their pottery was simple and utilitarian, the technical skill involved was incredible on its own. But painting was something new to these people, and something several people had taken to copying as well.
Walls, rocks, trees, even the new bridge was painted by a collection of amateur but inspired artists, flexing their artistic muscles for the first time.
It was really fun.
Juliette smiled as they finished, the two kids running off to get their parents. Juliette herself ended up going to the river to wash the paint off her hands before dinner. As she walked, she considered her more pressing issues.
Specifically, the fact that bringing modern technology to the stone age wasn’t going to work. It wasn’t due to a lack of knowledge, but a lack of resources. It didn’t matter if she knew how to make concrete or gunpowder or whatever modern miracle if she couldn’t get together the materials to create the machines needed to make the machines needed to make it. She had about two hundred people under her command, but only a dozen could be taken off of necessary jobs like gathering food or making clothes.
So she’d backtracked. Big, world-shaking changes weren’t going to work right out the gate. Gunpowder was worthless if she hadn’t even discovered metallurgy, and metallurgy was worthless if she didn’t even know where to look for iron. Instead of changing the village, she tried to change her way of thinking. Don’t try to create a modern society out of a stone-age tribe—try to improve the stone-age tribe so that it one day evolves into a modern society.
And to do that, she’d developed her first new technology—boats.
Figuring it out was easier than she’d thought—she’d postponed figuring out writing to focus on bigger projects like boats and bridges, and managed to get all that done within a month. Comparatively, modern stuff like writing and bureaucracy were weird worthless things to these people that wasted their time.
That focus on the river had also caused her to realize how important the river was compared to the land, leading to her to focus primarily on the navy. Right now, it was just small crude barges, but soon she would figure out more complex and functional ships.
The focus on the navy had also made her painfully aware of how easy it would be to invade by sea. Er, river. They had no defenses there—in fact, that was the only part of the city walls that was open. So, once she’d realized that, she’d started building naval defenses.
The bridge worked for now. It was low—too low to allow boats to go under it, completely blocking off one direction of the river. And once she built a second bridge further upstream, she’d completely block off her city from naval attacks!
Maybe. She hadn’t found any good places upstream yet—in fact, the river seemed to be getting wider! She may have been closer to the ocean than she originally thought!
In the future the bridges might end up blocking their own ships, but right now defense was more important than offense. Forcing a naval invasion to turn into a land invasion now was more important than a mild inconvenience in the future.
It had also taken some time away from figuring out a writing system, but she was getting there! It was hard, okay! And honestly not that useful right now! She’d figure it out eventually! She knew how important it was! Honest!
Not that she was worried about invasions. Yet. After that war she fought at the beginning, she had spent the last few months consolidating, and focusing on her own holdings. She was like a loaf of bread—expand too little, and she’d never bake properly, but expand too much and she’d get burned.
One of the most important things she’d done so far was build a road from her capital of King’s End to the only other village she owned. It wasn’t an impressive road—more a dirt path, really—but just clearing a permanent path through the forest had done wonders for travel times. Now her people could consistently travel between cities in around half a day! Of course, river travel was faster, but only downriver. Trying to travel against the current was much harder.
But the road was useful, and she was setting up another plan to make one leading to the old location of Jamal’s village. Nobody lived there anymore, but the site was still a good place to set up a city of her own eventually.
So much to do, so little time!
Juliette sighed. Now if only she could finish figuring out her writing system.
9,939 God-Kings Remain
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Lost in Love
My name is Alexander Halesworth, sole heir to a prestigious ducal house. Or rather, that’s what my identity is supposed to be now. I still haven’t gotten used to this whole situation yet. Not long ago I was just a humble store clerk. But shortly after getting into an unfortunate road accident, I woke up in the setting of an infamous Otome Game called “Lost in Love: A Heart Throbbing Romance in a Fantasy World~!” Yeah. It’s even trashier than it sounds. Don’t judge me, it was a gift from a friend. *cough* Anyway, this situation wouldn’t be too bad, except I ended up in the body of the worst possible person: the villainess’ older brother. Alexander has great looks, near limitless wealth, and a thoroughly rotten personality. In most of the game’s endings I end up dead or exiled. My family also falls to ruin, and don’t even get me started on what happens to my evil little sister. Well, whatever. If that’s the hand fate dealt me, then I just have to prevent the bad ends, right? And if I have no choice but to deal with this family’s baggage, I may as well enjoy myself while I’m at it. Being filthy rich and powerful has its benefits. For example, this cute maid who I get to tease whenever I want. (Male lead otome reincarnation, inspired by Akuyaku Reijo Ni Koi Wo Shite and similar works)
8 149One Septendecillion Brass Doorknobs
The cogs and circuits of the great machine of inter-connectedness are once again in motion. A Thing is missing. In fact, several things are missing, and they have to be returned to their rightful owners. After a whole month of peace and quiet, Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency has two whole new cases to solve. And what a fine pair of cases they are. The journey will start close to home and venture beyond the Earth, far into the cosmos. It will connect an old professor (and his young friend), a paranoid billionaire, world’s worst mercenary and a band of mysterious twenty-somethings in a cool van. Yes, the Rowdy Three are also there. Yes, there is more than one cool van in this book. (You can’t go wrong with a cool van) Read on to discover more of Dirk’s past and Amanda’s future, of the successes and errors of Black Wing supervisor Adams, of unspoken feelings and disappearing music boxes and meanings lost in translation. Oh, and could there be someone watching this all from behind the reality curtains?.. [This is my version of DGHDA Season 3, written not as an imitation but as a tribute to Douglas Adams’s Dirk Gently novels. Yes, it is full novel length. You have been warned…]
8 134Judas Valiant: Chorus of the Machine Giants
The world of Judas Valiant is bustling with Fantasy and a touch of Steampunk. This is an original tale made as an homage to the famed Studio Ghibli and Guillermo Del Toro, all-the-while taking inspirations from numerous animes and fantasies alike (Too many to love! Too many to name!). When a bloody catastrophe strikes a young boy's home, desperation brings about an unknown visitor. Plagued with gut-wrenching fear and an oncoming spiral into madness comes the boy's only hope of survival. Ripe with desperate opportunity, arrives the many-faced creature rushing to make a deal worth several lifetimes. "To find your way into your parent's arms again, you'll need to become a Valiant." He explained. "A Valiant?" I responded suspiciously. "...One must perform a 3-part task in which you must demonstrate the essence of a Mother, the essence of a Father, and earn the essence of a Gaurdian." He explained with haste. Innocently playing into the unknown visitor's tempting hand, the boy agrees to a deal hopelessly intertwined with a journey like no other and is sent to the mysterious and massive city of New Dwarden. Faced with outrageously colorful characters, towering and seemingly alien animal life, and even talking frogs-lemur's, the boy must adapt to grand adventure to complete his impossible task. This a steampunk story about a second chance at life, one that grows beyond life and death. Join me Frankie, as I guide you through the original tale of Judas Valiant: Chorus Of The Machine Giants Primarily Inspired by: Hayao Miyazaki (Studio Ghibli) Dedicated To: D-Ward Special Thanks: Erick M. Justin C. Mauricio L. Liam G., Nino V. Very Loosely Based On The Life Of: Frankie S. Cover Credit To Whom It Pertains (I'm open to put artist name up here)
8 98Thief of Time
[Participant in the Royal Road Writathon challenge] Book 1: The Legend of Tot Synopsis: Claud Primus, a self-declared master thief, has a simple goal. To live forever. It's a rather easy task, for miraculous objects called lifestones are able to extend one's lifespan. These lifestones are best found in the treasuries of nobles, lovely resorts that Claud pays a visit to every so often. Unfortunately, one of those nightly visits go awry, and Claud is forced to escape with just a single lifestone and a box in hand. Normally, that's when things die down. The guards yawn, the gates close, and the night continues. But this time, the night isn't that forgiving. A dozen schemes result in the murder of someone important, and with a convenient scapegoat — Claud — at hand, it doesn't take long for him to be framed as a heinous criminal, wanted for the indirect murder of someone high up...and it just gets worse from there. Book 2: The Moon Lords' Rise Synopsis: As ordered chaos sweeps across Licencia, Claud leaves for Julan Barony, intent on making some profits there. Accompanied by the erstwhile heiress of Julan, a fellow member of the Moon Lords, the two plot against the barony's wealth...as well as a promise to bring about its downfall. Meanwhile, back home, the Moon Lords have busied themselves with digesting their gains. Eyes, however, are beginning to turn to this proverbial fish in a small pond. The fishermen are coming. When they cast their hook, what will Dia and the others do? Book 3: Murders under the Moons Synopsis: In the sleepy town of Nachtville, where Claud and Lily are forced to stop at, a set of nasty murders occurs. Victims scream out in fright, before a spear falls from the sky to end their suffering. Cowed and cautious, the master thief and his partner slink in the shadows, their objective that of home... A new task, however, has fallen on Dia. With a trusty helper at her side, she has to set off towards Nachtville itself, to solve the mystery Claud had abandoned. Faced with an enemy whose sole skillset is geared towards killing, how will they succeed? And what dark secrets will they find? Book 4: In the Dark of the Moons Synopsis: The year has ended. The four months of the full moons will soon be followed by two months of the new moons. Duke Istrel's ascension is around the corner. Amidst this political upheaval, Count Nightfall, Licencia's strongest defender, has been called away. The Moon Lords' largest task yet — to protect Licencia in the absence of its ruler — has begun. And yet, trouble is unrelenting. A distinguished personage, one that Claud fears, has been found dead in the county, his brains dug out and his body disemboweled. The inquisitors of the White Church have been dispatched to investigate and apprehend the murderer...as well as the person behind this puppet. Tormented by a call to fight, Claud directs his eyes out of the city, looking for the puppetmaster. Skulking in the shadows, the master thief will soon confront his greatest foe yet. A foe just like him. Book 5: Moonlit Tides and Darkened Seas Synopsis: A new era has begun. For the privileged, the sands of time dribble away for every passing moment, counting down to the arrival of a entity of mythical proportions. The night now harbours shadows and fog, and operatives of the Moons and the Dark clash in shadow. Claud, as usual, is investigating a spate of nasty disappearances in the city, but little does he know what these disappearances truly mean. And yet, a tide is coming. When it finally breaks, what will he do? Book 6: Secrets in Shadow Synopsis: The person behind a strike that would enter the annals of history flees his home, bringing with him the person closest to his heart into a new land and into a new world. Having left Istrel for the first time in his life, the two of them attempt to settle down in foreign lands, only to be caught in the middle of hostilities between two mighty powers grappling for dominion. Yet, none of that has anything to do with him. Following his desires, Claud eventually makes his way to the fabled Celestia Ruins, a fragment of another world. Bearing witness to truths he cannot yet comprehend, he returns from his exploration, a small break away from the machinations of destiny. One thing, however, is for certain. Destiny will not wait for him. Book 7: Reddest Rage Synopsis: Destiny churns on, heedless of mortal machinations, and Claud watches as the battlegrounds between the Moons and the Dark are drawn up. With the forces of the great Dark occupying Lostfon, Claud comes to a startling realisation — that he may have very well be a murderer of heinous proportions. Grappling with that realisation, he struggles to prepare for his Second Tutorial... Back in Istrel, Dia finds herself confronted with a perennial truth. Even in a time of writhing destiny, the machinations between nobles never cease to end — and unfortunately for her, the group once known as the Moon Lords are forced into dealing with a petty squabble between two counts. What they didn't account for, however, was the startling discovery they would soon make... And the shadow of the Red God's Holy Son behind it all. Book 8: Darkness Descends Synopsis: Nightmares haunt the horizon as Claud sinks and awakens from a seeming dream. What was once illusory begins to play out before him, in a way he cannot imagine. Dia, forced to wield arms, begins and ends a battle that opens her eyes to the vast dangers that lurk in this sundered world. Under the banner of humanity and divinity, she beholds the silent, forgotten protectors of Orb...but there is no forgetting the battle between the divinities. The Dark descends, the Moons writhe, and the horns of war blow once more. But this is not their battle. Not yet. Book 9: Moons Muster Synopsis: As more and more events fall into place, Claud finds himself desperate. Not for himself, but for the person who has turned into his world. Armed with the knowledge of a certain future, he approaches the only person that could possibly help him in his time of need, trading information for a promise of help. With that as solace, he returns to the grim task of understanding and seeking, revisiting an ancient, shattered fragment of another world...unleashing changes that he never knew was possible. Back in Istrel, Dia and the others must now navigate around a familiar spirit, who seeks to investigate the death of his master's Bearer. With them as prime suspects, the Seekers of Life must move carefully...but the Coloured Gods are not the only divinities eyeing them closely. The Moons, bristling from repeated defeats, are looking for new recruits, and the Seekers of Life are prime cannon fodder. Above all, destiny marches on, the unfeeling clock a warning to all. The Trial of Aeons will soon arrive. Book 10: Destiny Divine Synopsis: ??? Release frequency: one every few days or something, I guess. (This work is also being serialised on Webnovel under the name Revile as a trial run)
8 678The one who walks alone (Xianxia/Wuxia)
Sparrow's grandma doesn't want him to spend life picking turnips, she wants him to be somebody - so she drags him to the best academy in the land and threatens the administrators until they let Sparrow in. But with deranged maniacs running the academy - arrogant, poo throwing young masters, and princesses who kick his ass - Sparrow isn't so sure the academy life is for him. After being kicked out he becomes a hobo - wandering a world full of cultivators and demons - and picking up all the skills the road can teach him. Sure, Sparrow wouldn't mind becoming a god one day, but to start with, he just wants to make his grandma proud.
8 110Vengeance by Moonlight
On a baleful, moonlit night, one man had nearly everything he possessed snatched away from him. Everything but his daughter. This would spark a lifetime search for answers, and revenge. But now, Donald McKinnon has gone missing, and it is up to his surviving daughter, Gavina, to put together the pieces of his disappearance, and in the process find the answers and retribution for her family's slaying. To do this, this habitual loner will need to employ the services of a number of colorful characters. From a half-mad aristocrat and his unshakeable manservant to a brilliant scholar, and a back alley thug as dangerous as their target, she will drag this menagerie into a world of murder, magic, and monsters to rescue what is most precious to her. Will they make it in time? And what grander plot might they uncover? All will be revealed, but not plenty of sweat, a few tears, and plenty of blood.
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