Goblin Slayer 01-12 -

Not for long. Just long enough to drink a bowl of soup that Dwarf Shaman had shoved into his hands. The firelight showed a young face—younger than she had expected. Scarred. Tired. With eyes that looked like they had stopped being surprised a long time ago.

Priestess cast Protection . A shimmering wall of divine light held the horde at bay for three breaths. Then the shaman came. Ugly little thing, draped in stolen fetishes, and it disbelieved her miracle. The barrier shattered like spun glass.

Holy water. Not against the undead. Against the floor .

She fell backward into the dirt, clutching her holy symbol, waiting for the first blade. Goblin Slayer 01-12

Priestess, they called her now. The name felt like a borrowed cloak—fine, but not yet her own. At the Guild, her silver breastplate still gleamed without a single scratch. Her robe was white as fresh snow. She had passed the examination, received her porcelain rank, and chosen her first quest with the bright, terrible naivety of a candlefly meeting a lantern.

He did not introduce himself. He did not ask if she was hurt. He simply asked, “Are those all of them?”

She wanted to say something brave. Instead, she started crying. Not from fear. From a sudden, terrible understanding: he had never expected anyone to protect him. He had fought alone for so long that the idea of a hand reaching for him, not past him, was foreign as a song in a dead language. Not for long

“Yes,” Priestess said, and she meant it now, not like a borrowed cloak but like armor she had earned. “I do.”

She wanted to ask if that was a joke. She decided it was not.

Goblins.

She thought of her first party. The swordsman’s broken blade. The martial artist’s empty hands. The scout’s quick smile, gone forever. She thought of the girl with the bruised knee, alive. She thought of the farms, the mines, the villages—places where children still slept in beds because someone had walked into the dark.

That was Priestess’s first lesson: Goblins were not the punchline of a tavern joke. They were the punch. Goblin Slayer—for that was all the name he answered to—lived in a barn. Not a stable. A barn. The hay had been cleared for a simple bed, a workbench, and a rack of weapons so varied it looked like an armory’s rejected pile: short swords, torches, nets, a ladder, vials of strange liquids, a hammer meant for breaking locks. Everything was stained. Everything smelled of smoke and iron.

“I know.”