CHAPTER 16……………………………………….
The raccoon put the egg and the crystal into a vine pouch that looked similar to the bag tied around its waist.
A beast that knows how to use toolsâsmarter than I expected.
âIf youâre thinking of picking a fight with me, youâd better stop. I possess a talent. If you back off now, Iâll let you go peacefully.
The raccoon bared its small fangs and growled. It seemed brimming with confidence in its own abilities.
I stood on my two legs in front of it, loosening my shoulders and neck until they cracked.
âIâve never tried raccoon meat before.
If it wouldnât give them back, Iâd just take them. As a bonus, I could also solve tonightâs dinnerâkilling two birds with one stone.
The raccoon narrowed its eyes and continued to growl.
âSo you really want to see blood. Iâve been craving meat myself.
âHmph.
I snorted at the threat, unfazed, while carefully checking its claws and teeth.
True to a carnivore, its teeth were fairly sharp. But compared to wolves, they looked small and almost cuteânot enough to seriously injure my skin.
Its front claws were nicely curved, but compared to mine they looked no different from well-groomed fingernails.
Judging by appearance alone, I donât think Iâll lose. That line about having a talent does bother me a bit, though.
Ever since encountering that giant wolf, Iâd become much more cautious.
You never know what someone might do when cornered.
I planned to subdue it quickly and bite the back of its neck. Just rush it before it had time to react.
As I was about to spring forward like a coiled springâ
âIdiot!
The raccoon turned and fled a step faster than me.
I was momentarily stunned, but seeing it sprint on all fours like an arrow, bag still strapped on, I immediately gave chase at full speed.
Damn, itâs faster than I thought!
I couldnât help but admire how deftly it cut through the brush and dodged between trees. Still, despite its skillful escape, the distance between us kept shrinking.
At this rate, I figured I could sink my teeth into its neck within ten-odd seconds.
After running for a while, a huge thicket appeared, and the raccoonâs back vanished right into it.
âHiding now wonât help!
I plunged into the dense bushes after itâand in that instant, my vision lurched and the ground dropped away beneath my feet.
âUghâwhat the hell?!
When I came to my senses, I was at the bottom of a pit several meters deep. White bones of various animals lay scattered inside.
I looked up to see the raccoon peeking out from between the bushes. It curled the corner of its mouth smugly as it looked down at me slumped in the trap.
âIdiot. What a fool. Heh heh. You can talk, so I thought you were pretty smart.
âHaâŠ
Realizing Iâd fallen for its bait and trap, a hollow laugh escaped me.
Being outplayed mentally by a mere beastâthere was no humiliation quite like it. My insides boiled, but I calmed myself and started thinking.
Itâs smarter than I thought.
My warinessâand my assessment of itârose another notch.
âYouâll regret it if you think a measly trap like this can stop me.
I dug my claws into the pit walls and started climbing.
Since the pit was made of dirt, my claws kept crumbling the walls. It required far more technique and finesse than climbing trees.
The raccoon kept pelting me with stones. Somehow it managed to hit my forehead every single timeâits aim was impressively good, unlike mine.
âYou little bastard. Once I get up there, youâre dead.
âIâm not a raccoon, Iâm a tanuki, idiot! And youâll never make it up here! Youâll get hit with the Magic of Silence!
âThe Magic of Silence?
A deep shadow fell into the pit. I gaped at the head-sized rock in the tanukiâs hands.
âHey, thatâs going too far. Whoa, no. Put that down.
âOnce this hits, everything goes quiet. Thatâs why itâs the Magic of Silence.
The boulderâreally more like a small rockâdropped into the pit.
âTch.
I clicked my tongue and let go of the wall to dodge it.
It was a shame to lose the progress Iâd made, but if that thing had hit me square on, even I wouldnât have escaped a concussion.
I crouched tightly at the bottom. The tanuki looked down at me, idly turning the stone in its hands.
âGiving up already? Planning to turn into bones down there?
It kept mocking me. I ignored the provocation and studied the gouges carved into the dirt walls.
Some of them were claw marks Iâd made while climbing.
If I just step on those, I should be fine.
I quickly formed an escape plan. This time, instead of relying on sharp claws, Iâd depend on pure strength and athleticism.
Jumping without a running start was a bit tricky, but compared to that leap Iâd made underground before, this was easier.
I crouched low like a frog, tensing my muscles until my hind legs almost cramped, then leapt as high as I could toward the wall.
âWhat?!
The tanuki shrieked. I kicked off the grooves in the wall, climbing higher and higher.
Bounding back and forth between the walls, I soon reached the surface.
As I landed, I slammed my forepaw down on the tanukiâs neck. It writhed in shock, clearly stunned by my physical ability.
âTold you I wouldnât let you off easy.
I opened my jaws wide to bite down on its neck. Seeing my sharp teeth, the tanuki screamed.
âW-w-wait! IâI was wrong! Iâll give everything backâthe gems, the egg!
âToo late to apologize. Iâm hungry.
âIâI wonât taste good! Yeah, definitely not! Tanuki taste awful! Everyone says so!
âYou wonât know until you try.
I clamped down hard on its neck. It let out a series of bizarre screams.
I hadnât even bitten that hardâits overreaction was almost funny.
âS-spare me! IâI have babies in my belly!
âWhat? Youâre female? Youâre pregnant?
âY-yes. At home, there are children waiting for me to come back with foodâŠ
The tanukiâs eyes welled with tears as it sniffled.
Hearing that there were children at home made me hesitate.
Alongside a flicker of guilt at killing a pregnant mother, a cold, calculating thought surfaced: Wouldnât it be a huge gain to take over its home and eat the pups too?
âHmm. Still, Iâm hungry right now. Is that really a reason to spare you?
âH-home. Yes, at home Iâve got a hidden beehive. Itâs full of honey. I hid it where the kids canât reach. Iâll give it to you. You like honey, right? Huh?
âHmm. A home, huh.
I pretended to think it over. The neck clenched in my jaws trembled violentlyâit was terrified.
At least Iâd succeeded in making it seem like it would guide me home. Still, trusting it completely felt wrong.
The honey is probably a lie. The babies could be a lie too.
But having a home was likely true.
Surviving in this hellish forest and being this intelligent, it must have a fairly decent shelter.
Letâs try taking its home. Eating it can come later.
With its neck still in my mouth, I let out a low, rumbling chuckle.
*
âAre you sure weâre going the right way? Feels like weâre just going in circles.
I frowned down at the tanuki, its neck tightly bound with vines. It flinched at my question.
âY-yes. Just a little farther. This area all looks similarâitâs confusing.
âTry anything funny and youâll be my dinner. Same if you try to run.
I yanked the vine hard, making its body swing back and forth.
Never thought Iâd live to see the day I walk a talking tanuki on a leash.
The absurdity made me laugh. It reminded me of walking my dog back when I lived with my parents.
âT-turn right here. See that big tree over there?
Standing on two legs, the tanuki pointed ahead. Where it indicated stood something like a thick, massive baobab tree.
âThatâs my home.
âThat tree?
I raised an eyebrow.
How could a tree be a home? Did it sleep up there?
Iâd hoped for at least a decent cave, if not a nice stone house. Disappointment washed over me.
A beast is still a beast, I suppose.
âDoesnât look like a home. Where are your kids and the honey?
âInside the tree. It looks solid outside, but itâs hollow inside. Thatâs my nest.
âAh.
I nodded slowly. If a tree that thick were hollow, it would be spacious enough for a beast or two.
I followed it toward the tree, circling around, but couldnât find anything resembling an entrance.
âYou go in from underground. Hereâthereâs an entrance under this stone slab.
The tanuki moved a flat stone near the tree, revealing a narrow, deep hole.
âNot bad.
âTook some effort to make it.
Pleased with the praise, it rubbed the bridge of its nose with a finger like a human.
I looked down at the hole and muttered softly.
âThen you go first. And you know what happens if you lied, right?
After issuing a firm warning, I shoved it into the hole. It crawled in skillfully.
Seems the entrance wasnât a lie.
âClose the stone slab when you come in. Canât leave the entrance exposed.
âIâll handle that. Just keep moving.
I followed it into the hole. The tunnel was very narrow, and being larger, I got a bit stuck.
Big beasts like wolves wouldnât even think of coming in here.
It was a clever way to keep out large intrudersâsomething Iâd never considered when building my own home.
The tanuki squeezed between thick tree roots and soon disappeared into an opening above.
That must be the end.
I lifted my face up as well. In that instant, a wide, open space appeared, and the claustrophobia vanished.
âImpressive.
It was quite cozyâeasily five times larger than the stone house Iâd built.
But nowhere in that wide space were there beehives or baby tanuki. Only strange, gleaming stones decorated the place.
âYou lied. About the babies tooâit was all a lie.
âYeah. Had to, if I wanted to get home alive. The one who fell for it is the bad guy.
The tanuki smirked confidently at me as I was half inside the tree. In its hand was a long sword.
The sharp metal blade and finely crafted hilt were far too sophisticated for something a tanuki could make. It was clearly the work of a civilized being.
I didnât know where it got it, but the idea that it lured me here relying on just that made me laugh.
âThat wonât stop me. You should give up.
âYou wonât know until you try!
It raised the sword high and slammed it into the ground. At first it seemed pointless, but the vines spread across the floor were cutâand suddenly my body was lifted into the air.
A tightly woven net of layered vines constricted me.
Trapped and floating near the ceiling, I felt more intrigued than panicked, a smile creeping onto my face.
Crude, but itâs a real net.
A pit trap was one thing, but Iâd never imagined it could use something this technical.
Isnât it smarter than me? How did it even make this?
Just moments ago Iâd planned to eat itâbut now my plans had changed.
This one might be more useful than I thought.


