At that
time, his father put what he calls a little crown on his head.
Mononobe’s silhouette shows up, and he tells him to never take it off.
He can’t ever lose it either, because there is only one of it. When
Solomon asked why, Mononobe told him that it’s meant to tie him to one
vessel. It would do so even if he were to be composed of 72 defeated
beings from other worlds put into one frame.
Mononobe
tells Solomon that whatever his name was in wherever he was from, it’s
been forgotten and he now lives as a new demon. He also tells him to be
careful, because if he ever loses it he’ll fall apart again.
Solomon
doesn’t understand much of it, but he somehow understands the falling
apart thing. He gets it as a painful thing to happen, which he starts
shaking in fear at the thought of. And before long, despite knowing how
shameful it looks, he started crying.
He
wondered why something so frightening would happen. Did he do something
wrong? Solomon then asks Mononobe to tell him what he is, what a demon
is. He does so, patting him on the head gently first before holding him
tenderly and explaining.
Mononobe asks
whether Solomon remembers anything about his past. Solomon does not.
Mononobe then tells him that he is what’s called dragons, the term for
the loneliest demons in the world.
Solomon
asked if demons/dragons are evil. Mononobe says that some of them are.
The loneliest of them are probably the evilest of them all. Wherever he
went, that’s what he saw. He just...didn’t want to believe that.
Because
of that Mononobe decided to give Solomon a name that wasn’t Demon.
Whatever the name was, was too much for him to remember as he was at the
time though. And so, the name was shortened to Li’l Salomon. It was his
name, a name only for him. Even now he can remember how happy he was
when he felt that time.
Flashback narration
ends as a little bit of time skips after the Warmongers’ attack as
Musashi comes up to see you off after the post battle clean up. Everyone
else has already apparently left or something. Anyways you either greet
the guy or ask where he went when everything was going down.
Going
B, he says he was doing lots of different things behind the scenes.
Stuff like being Kurogane’s herald and clearing out foes hiding in the
shadows, that sort of thing. He then says it’s not an exaggeration to
say that things went alright this time thanks to his young man self.
Musashi then says he doesn’t have the excuse of prioritizing the safety
of his bosses though. He asks that you think of it as him thinking it’ll
be fine if you take care of things since you were able to hold up
against him earlier.
Musashi then changes
the subject and says it seems like you’ve really changed the way your
expression looks. You wonder or say maybe so. Either way he says you
look like you seem refreshed, unburdened. If something ever happens
again, give him a call. Maybe he’ll help depending on the circumstances.
You either agree or say you’ll think about it.
Whichever
way you go, you decide to ask Musashi one other thing. He doesn’t mind
and considers it a way of keeping a door open for a possible future
employer, which could pay off one day. Then he asks what the question
is.
You can either ask if his five selves
ever fight, ask if it’d be better to be just one person, or if his
selves ever disagreed. He thinks it’s a weird question, but after
thinking on it tells you that there are plenty of times when they don’t
see eye to eye and fight over it. Disagreements are pretty constant too.
He’s never actually thought about becoming one person though.
Musashi
does say that maybe fusing everyone together into one person might make
things easier. It’d stop all the fighting and would make things more
efficient. But on the other hand...turning into one person would be
boring. For the young man self in the driver’s seat at the moment?
Things are fun when he’s with the others, not when he’s alone. While
they may fight, they watch each others’ backs.
You
either agree after a moment, ask if there’s someone who has their
memories mixed, or stay quiet. Going B if it matters, Musashi asks if
you mean the memories coming from an artifact’s previous owner. He
thinks it’s no big deal. So long as you know, you should just do
whatever you want. If you decide to continue with someone else’s life
knowing what you’re doing, that’s your business. But he does tell you
that, if it’s a continuation of someone who has died, to not think that
it’s the same life as theirs.
Musashi sums
up what he wants to say as “it’s fine to decide after you understand
everything.” Like where you own self begins and ends, what you have, and
what’s different from other people...even if it comes to an identical
sibling you’ve been separated from for life. Even if there was someone
who perfectly imitated him. Or a kind of robot that looks exactly like
oneself. Or a shadow that’s so much better than you despite looking like
you. Or for a final example, the original of your amnesiac self.
Musashi
says all of those hypothetical people are all other people. Even
amongst himselves, his young man self, his neutral polite self, and his
old man self have different names for each other and are different
people to each other. But he says that no matter where you go, people
define person as a single being. But it’s because of that that he thinks
it’s fun, and he asks if you think so too.
You
take a sec to digest that and say you know, thanking him. He wonders if
what he told you answers your question and says it’s good if it did.
What you decide is your own path. What you choose and how it ends...is
stuff you can decide however you like. You agree and say you’ll see him
later. Before you do go, Musashi decides to ask who are you. Who is it
that stands in front of them? You tell him you want to know that too,
which is why you came here.
Musashi
comments that when you don’t know about other things much, you start to
understand yourself. Then he changes topics and asks you to tell
Shuuichi hi from him if you get the chance and waves you later.
Scene
shifts over to wherever the East guild and the Tokyo Cathedral is as no
real world location goes by that name far as I could tell. The guild
itself though gets described as a gathering of instructors and
transcendents. Some angels approach Michael and kneel before him as they
report something, then asks what he’ll do. Michael says it’s okay to
lead That Guest here.
Arslan and the head
dark angel mob from Aoyama both show up, and Arslan voices his surprise
at how easily he was let in since this is their stronghold and all.
Michael says it’s Arslan’s treasure sword. Michael is bound by his class
to give the utmost respect to its owner so long as they have it.
Michael
says it’s the sword that belonged to the wise king, the one who has the
hexagram star and the Narrator of Wisdom and Poetry. It was for the one
Michael had recognized as having royal authority, and as Arslan is the
memory inheritor, he’s treating him as such. It’s also why the angels at
Aoyama listen to him and treat him as a king.
Arslan
says if that’s really the only reason why, it’s kind of sad. He admits
there’s some truth to it though. He says he’s seen a lot of angels
besides the ones in Aoyama even before he came over there. Arslan does
say Michael is wrong about one thing, which is that he is Aoyama’s
guardian and not its king.
Michael agrees
and says he’s known that really well for a long time, longer than he
has. He then starts talking about the legitimate guildmaster of the
Missionaries, the human who has inherited the memories of angels. Or an
angel, I dunno. But Michael says they’ve just exchanged hostilities with
them at their (Michael’s side) portal earlier.
Michael
says the Invaders are having problems, and he’s heard the Warmongers
are currently being bothered by them too. Arslan is surprised and starts
cackling about how crazy Jacob is being. Michael starts talking about
how he wants the Missionaries to just roll over and be under his
command. The Warmongers and Invaders are expanding their own power too
after all.
Michael says it’d be fastest if
Arslan went back to tell the remaining Missionaries that. Arslan says he
already mentioned being a king once, but he’s handed over the reins to
the young ones already and will only be watching them take their path.
They’re standing on their own feet now, Maria, Jacob, and everyone else
in Tokyo.
Michael’s face twitches for a
moment when Arslan mentions those names. Arslan then asks what the point
of pushing an old lion into an old world is. The Missionaries no longer
need him to guide them. Michael calls it disappointing and says he’ll
have to show off his strength then to force the Missionaries to join
him.
Arslan comments on the part about it
being just Michael and not Michael and the others. He says Michael’s
methods are too severe, where he’ll leave everyone in ignorance and try
to teach them all himself. He then asks if that is what Eden wishes for.
Michael
says Arslan got the order of things wrong. As its World Representative,
what Michael wants is what Eden wants. He knows his brother’s mistake,
so he won’t be repeating it himself. Therefore everyone will be given
eternal ignorance and happiness. He won’t be deviating from this plan,
he says. And if Arslan wants to stop him his treasure sword won’t help,
because if he doesn’t have that king’s Ring it won’t serve him.
According
to Michael, the possessor can get any angel, any demon, and even the
strongest of dragons to serve them. That ring can even take the fallen
demons of other worlds and make 72 Pillars that can be bound into one
vessel. And if I understand him right, that ring can only work in one
dimension. It is a vessel for Rules that are too strong in the Tokyo
War.
Arslan comes out and says the ring
belonged to King Solomon, the Narrator of Wisdom and Poetry. It’s the
ring Michael personally gave to him. If that ring were to be given back
to Michael, or any of the World Representatives really...if that ring
were to be entrusted to another from its possessor and mastered, Arslan
says it would be a terrifying secret weapon.
Michael
says that since Arslan is the one who has inherited a fragment of King
Solomon’s memory, he should know of course. Arslan confirms that, saying
it would never be handed to someone who wishes for an eternal world.
Michael confirms that on his end as well, saying it’s been made a safety
valve and placed in a location the World Representatives could never
reach. Even if they know about it, they can’t get to it.
Arslan
says that in any case, King Solomon has let go of the ring. When he
starts talking about the meaning of it, Michael finishes his sentence
for him. The holder of the ring must do so because it is the price for
its power. If it were ever destroyed, it might turn into a huge
disaster. Michael says that King Solomon no longer exists, because he
has been exiled from the world.
Scene then
shifts back to your side as you meet Furufumi outside the old
schoolhouse. He welcomes you, and you say you’ve returned as you bow to
him. He sighs about having told you not to come back, but says he’ll
lead the way as a library committee member.
You’re
surprised by this and either ask if he’s not going to chase you away or
ask if it’s okay to go in. He says you’d go in even if he tried because
you have business here. He knows the type.
You
say you have something you need to know and nod firmly. As he looks at
you, he seems to remember something for a moment and leans in. You try
to talk to him and point out the leaning in thing. He says it’s nothing
and says you two should get going. You ask again if it’s okay to go in
and point out the security tape.
Furufumi
says he’s been entrusted with managing the old schoolhouse library by a
teacher, and that teacher has given you permission. He tells you it’s
fine. You wonder which teacher it could be, but Furufumi doesn’t say as
he gets out the keys and opens the door.
Scene
shifts to another narration zone flashback by Solomon. He and Mononobe
would read the book he was given together, and little by little he
learned about the ways of this world. There are many people and many
events, and they would repeat endlessly.
The
time Solomon spent with Mononobe was fun, and he would excitedly turn
the pages. He studied so much and learned so much. When he learned about
death, the disappearance of his self, he cried in fear. He always
thought about it, and of the day it would come. It became all he could
think about.
Until then, he wondered what
he would do in the world, how would he live. He asked Mononobe to teach
him that, and when he did, Mononobe said he had to figure that part for
himself. It isn’t something anyone can give him.
When
he heard that, Solomon worried. After all, as far as he could ever see
there was no one that was like him. There was no one he could consult
like he was reading a book. And as he worried about that, Mononobe
showed him someone. It was a certain person who appeared on the world of
the other side of the wall. It was someone who was just born into the
world, like him. Someone all alone, with no one resembling them around.
Solomon
couldn’t take their eyes off them when Mononobe spoke to him. He said
that person was the same as him. It’s him, on the other side of the
world. His true self and his self in the world could not exist unless
they were separate pieces. If That did not forget that they were a
dragon, they could not have lived in the world of man. And until they
gained the strength to remember that, Mononobe wanted them to be
protected and live.
Solomon narrates that
he didn’t understand much of what Mononobe said. He did grasp the most
important part though, that they were a demon/dragon same as him.
Someone the same as him on the other side of the wall, who he could
never take his eyes off of.
Mononobe
brushed Solomon on the head as he spoke more. He asked Solomon to help
them, get close to them, and to serve them. It’s fine for Solomon to do
that up until he finds what he really wants to do himself.
Solomon
admits he was dissatisfied with that a little. He was the senpai here
after all, so why should he work for the other one? But he decides it’s
fine because he’s the senpai. If he can do that he can look better as an
adult. But honestly? He was happy about it. Even if he were to go past
the walls, the days he spent with them were fun. Today he still waits to
be called, to hear his name. And when it happens, his Shadow will pass
through the hexagram star and fly to where his master is.
Scene
shifts back to where you are, now inside the old library. Furufumi
leads the way with an old lantern, and he asks if you have a way of
finding what it is you want to know. Even if you know the book title it
could take a lot of time to find it. You say it should be fine and you
have a lead as you summon your sword.
Furufumi
is surprised you’d pull a sword out in a place like this, but he’s even
more surprised when it starts making noise in reaction to something.
You figured this would happen as Shirou had thought about that.
Flashback
starts up as Shirou talks to you, surprised you also went to the old
schoolhouse. He tells you he also went there before, even before he drew
out Yog-Sothoth’s memories. He seemed to resonate with the Necronomicon
then, and he remembers feeling like something pulled him in. He
compares it to a premonition, telling him he’d go back again.
Back
to the present you say the sword is guiding you that way and ask
Furufumi to lead. He understands and asks you to follow him. Sometime
later you figure which book it is and point it out. Furufumi shouts in
surprise when he sees it, saying it was the book Mononobe was reading
that day. You either read off the name Ars Almadel Salomonis or be
surprised at what Furufumi said.
Before
anything else happens a light flares up as things start flying out of
the book. Shadow dragons appear, and they approach you. It seems as if
they’re attacking, but narration says they’re moving to return to you.
And then the episode battle begins.
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