This kept her in the path of her charging opponents, and they slammed into her with great force. She was knocked off balance and thrown back a couple of meters. She took a few steps to stabilize herself and make sure she didn’t fall down. As a grin formed on her face when she fully recovered. “Ah!
“We will refrain from killing, of course. Going easy is another matter.” Eva agreed with a quick nod. “We won’t learn without any pain to back it up.” “We have a similar saying - if you do not learn after the first cut, you will suffer a second.” Eva called out to her group and had them size eac
The two off duty guards loomed over Eva as they processed her words. They had their translators reconfirm her meaning, then glanced at each other in complete puzzlement. To them, she was just some frail human girl. In fact, they viewed all humans as rather frail. The fact that the two of them tied
He took a step back as he reassessed Eva. It only took him a moment to realize that she was much more capable than the three he had fought earlier. Excited by the prospect of facing a real opponent, his scowl turned into a grin as he swiped at her with more power, more speed. He threw strike after
Both wore intricate lamellar armor, but the one that was a beautiful gradient of jade had silver accents on her armor. The other was a stunning dark orange, and her armor held bronze accents. “Justicars!” cried Eva’s opponent. “We-we performed a legitimate duel. Please do not cite me for it!” “Why
Eva and Miko found themselves cruising high above the city, which the Justicars referred to as Lacroseth, the capital of Taloren Prime, and of the Drogar Imperium as a whole. Their EyeCasts hovered nearby as they looked at the sights all around. They rode in a relatively common transport gondola. S
How did they evolve on this planet? She tried her best to look up Drogar history, especially regarding Taloren Prime, but her access to their textbooks, news, and other historical files was dismally low. All she had access to was mostly Drogar-skewed history for the past 100 years. No doubt incred
“We do, as well,” replied Doleth. “I mean, restoring the planet isn’t entirely possible for other reasons, ecologically speaking. But beyond that, most of us feel that doing that wouldn’t do anything. Except maybe waste money on a hopeless project.” “Most of you? What’s that mean? So some do want t