10-18-2017, 10:07 PM
“Herrrg… ngn…” The crushing weight is what finally woke Stein. Not the sound of crashing, or the constant ringing of his phone, but the sudden impact of something landing upon him, drilling his body through the third floor of his building down into the basement. After a brief moment, the weight lifted and he could hear a thundering impact not far off.
The hero rolled out of what used to be his bed and snatched his ruined cellphone off the ground. With a sigh, he clinched it in his hand. Much like stitching flesh, the bits and pieces grew back together. He powered the device on and flipped through his texts.
“Attention, all S class heroes. Dragon-level threat has been sighted in X-City.”
“Thaaat’s what woke me… Cool.” Pocketing the phone in his fuzzy pajama pants, the hero flicked his hands up. The sphere appeared between them then after a moment of focus, it shatters, reforming into full sized Comet Shield. He tossed the shield and then leapt upon it to surf through the air as easily as he would slide sock footed through the kitchen.
Up and out of the hole, Stein quickly analyzed the situation. A group of giant, dragon-like creatures were swarming the sky and land. He could already see a number of the other heroes had come to the aid. “Best not keep them waiting,” he mumbled to himself mid-yawn. The comet shield beneath his feet moved at the slightest twitch of his feet, propelling him above the buildings and forward.
In each hand he created another orb, tossing them left and right as he proceeded. Like individual egg timers, they powered up, and then shattered to reform into Shield Guardians. These glass soldiers race across the ground, parting ways with Stein to preform damage control. As was his job. It was why he was lumped in with S-class as an A-class hero. Twelve Shield Guardians in total were summoned, and as they raced away they were constantly growing in their own individual power.
Skyward aimed, he surfed above a great many of the dragons. A few tried to take a bite out of him, but a tilt of the shield and all they received was a snout of glass, or a scraping of their teeth along an impenetrable wall. They were not very agile, and that was one of their greatest flaws. One attack and they flew away to remain airborne, while Stein moved more like a humming bird.
Both hands came together to create another orb. The glassy structure grew rapidly at first, then slowed down as it reached the size of a basketball. He moved the orb overhead as it began crackling with condensed magical energy. It might have seemed dangerous, but even the heroes that spotted this soon to be massive growing orb did not make an effort to move out of the way. The Turtle Guard was pretty famous for lacking any devastating attacks.
One hand left the growing shield as another dragon approached. As the creature’s snout slammed into Stein’s palm, pushing him back through the air, a crystalline shell began to form, like a splash of water in a sphere around the dragon. As it completed, the winged beast fell from the sky, unable to flap its mighty wings in the new structure.
“Almighty Shield,” Stein announced. He was not big on announcing the names of his moves; that seemed quite cliche. However, this was the one exception. The words spread like a crack of thunder across the cityscape below. The orb overhead had grown to the mass of a large man. Most of his shields required a sphere barely larger than a golf ball, but this was his greatest creation.
The last hand feeding power into the shield lowered. The crackling orb fell to the ground below. On impact with pavement, it shatters. The magical glass-like shockwave spread faster than wild fire across gasoline soaked dry grass. Stein’s gaze quickly picked out all the dragons he could see as the growing dome raced towards them. Buildings, animals, people, they were all spared but the dragons bubbled by the shield and forced up. Heroes passed through, gaining from the shield a second wind. Buildings were repaired, civilians and animals were healed.
The Turtle Guard watched as the Shield Guardians below threw the dragons into the air, the bubble shields making them nigh weightless. Those who could fly grabbed the creatures, or assaulted them through the one-way shield. One by one, the creatures were slaughtered. Defenseless and imprisoned, there was no real fight. None could break his shields…
The danger level was obviously in their numbers, not their individual strength. This must be how Saitama feels. He had woken up, hoping for something more… thrilling. All he got was a cool scene of flying bus-sized dragons.
Almighty Shield was a powerhouse. It took a while to create, almost a minute even with his great reserve of energy. It was the opposite of Saitama’s One Punch – which remained the only thing Stein knew could defeat it. Even Metal Knight had yet to build something on such a grand scale.
Six hours later… Stein was back in his repaired apartment, watching TV. His head rested on the arm of his couch, with a phone held to his ear. “No, I’m fine…. Seriously… I told you why, the S-class heroes are jerks… Well not all of them, but a lot of them… No, I won’t name an-- … I’m not being disrespectful, I’m just saying I like A-class, all my friends are A-class.” The conversation continues like this for an hour.
It was hard for people to understand. Ranks and Class meant so little to Stein. Heroing was not a competition, it was a job, just like anything else. S-class did not offer anything he wanted, and it just meant he would have to attend those awful meetings. As A-rank, he could just show up to a high danger crisis, do his thing and not have to worry about the semantics. After all, those meetings were usually about how to save lives and property – which he had in spades. If anything, they needed him.
Stein’s thoughts were interrupted by a knock on his door. With a groan he rolled off the couch and yanked on some pants. When he opened the door, he was met with his cute neighbor in an arm sling. “Hey…”
“Sup?” Stein smiles. “You need help watering your plants again?”
The young redhead shakes her head and smiles. “No, just… baked you a thank-you pie. Cherry with chocolate chips and mint, I know it’s your favorite.” It was plastered on his fan page at this point… chocolate and mint anything was high on his list. “I thought I was going to die when that beam crushed me…”
Stein waved off the notion. “That was my bad… I had my phone on silent, I should have stopped all of that before it even happened. I’m just sorry I couldn’t instantly heal your arm.”
The young woman laughed. “Doctor said I should have had a collapsed lung and a dozen ruptured veins… I think you fixed the issues that mattered.” Stein nodded. He’d accept that much at least. She handed over the pie, complete with a quart of ice cream to melt over it. “Anyway, thanks.”
As she turned to leave, he watched her sashay away. “Hey,” he began. She turned and offered that cute, bright smile. “Would you…” He tried once more, but hesitated.
“Would I what?”
Like to catch a movie? Have dinner with me? Netflix and chill? No. “Would you like your pie tin back? I think I still have the one from last time.”
“Sure, just bring them over when you’re done, okay?”
He nodded. After nudging the door closed with his foot, a long, annoyed sigh escaped him. What was I thinking? Of course she’d say yes… Why would anyone say no? I saved her life, she’d be obligated. Hell, everyone would be obligated. Another downside of being a famous hero; dating sucked.
He returned to the couch. The pie tin burned his leg even through his pants, but his tough skin could handle it. He spooned some of the butterpeacon ice cream onto the crust and scooped up a hearty spoonful of the combination. Another successful mission, another boring night in: it made Stein almost miss his C-class days.
The hero rolled out of what used to be his bed and snatched his ruined cellphone off the ground. With a sigh, he clinched it in his hand. Much like stitching flesh, the bits and pieces grew back together. He powered the device on and flipped through his texts.
“Attention, all S class heroes. Dragon-level threat has been sighted in X-City.”
“Thaaat’s what woke me… Cool.” Pocketing the phone in his fuzzy pajama pants, the hero flicked his hands up. The sphere appeared between them then after a moment of focus, it shatters, reforming into full sized Comet Shield. He tossed the shield and then leapt upon it to surf through the air as easily as he would slide sock footed through the kitchen.
Up and out of the hole, Stein quickly analyzed the situation. A group of giant, dragon-like creatures were swarming the sky and land. He could already see a number of the other heroes had come to the aid. “Best not keep them waiting,” he mumbled to himself mid-yawn. The comet shield beneath his feet moved at the slightest twitch of his feet, propelling him above the buildings and forward.
In each hand he created another orb, tossing them left and right as he proceeded. Like individual egg timers, they powered up, and then shattered to reform into Shield Guardians. These glass soldiers race across the ground, parting ways with Stein to preform damage control. As was his job. It was why he was lumped in with S-class as an A-class hero. Twelve Shield Guardians in total were summoned, and as they raced away they were constantly growing in their own individual power.
Skyward aimed, he surfed above a great many of the dragons. A few tried to take a bite out of him, but a tilt of the shield and all they received was a snout of glass, or a scraping of their teeth along an impenetrable wall. They were not very agile, and that was one of their greatest flaws. One attack and they flew away to remain airborne, while Stein moved more like a humming bird.
Both hands came together to create another orb. The glassy structure grew rapidly at first, then slowed down as it reached the size of a basketball. He moved the orb overhead as it began crackling with condensed magical energy. It might have seemed dangerous, but even the heroes that spotted this soon to be massive growing orb did not make an effort to move out of the way. The Turtle Guard was pretty famous for lacking any devastating attacks.
One hand left the growing shield as another dragon approached. As the creature’s snout slammed into Stein’s palm, pushing him back through the air, a crystalline shell began to form, like a splash of water in a sphere around the dragon. As it completed, the winged beast fell from the sky, unable to flap its mighty wings in the new structure.
“Almighty Shield,” Stein announced. He was not big on announcing the names of his moves; that seemed quite cliche. However, this was the one exception. The words spread like a crack of thunder across the cityscape below. The orb overhead had grown to the mass of a large man. Most of his shields required a sphere barely larger than a golf ball, but this was his greatest creation.
The last hand feeding power into the shield lowered. The crackling orb fell to the ground below. On impact with pavement, it shatters. The magical glass-like shockwave spread faster than wild fire across gasoline soaked dry grass. Stein’s gaze quickly picked out all the dragons he could see as the growing dome raced towards them. Buildings, animals, people, they were all spared but the dragons bubbled by the shield and forced up. Heroes passed through, gaining from the shield a second wind. Buildings were repaired, civilians and animals were healed.
The Turtle Guard watched as the Shield Guardians below threw the dragons into the air, the bubble shields making them nigh weightless. Those who could fly grabbed the creatures, or assaulted them through the one-way shield. One by one, the creatures were slaughtered. Defenseless and imprisoned, there was no real fight. None could break his shields…
The danger level was obviously in their numbers, not their individual strength. This must be how Saitama feels. He had woken up, hoping for something more… thrilling. All he got was a cool scene of flying bus-sized dragons.
Almighty Shield was a powerhouse. It took a while to create, almost a minute even with his great reserve of energy. It was the opposite of Saitama’s One Punch – which remained the only thing Stein knew could defeat it. Even Metal Knight had yet to build something on such a grand scale.
Six hours later… Stein was back in his repaired apartment, watching TV. His head rested on the arm of his couch, with a phone held to his ear. “No, I’m fine…. Seriously… I told you why, the S-class heroes are jerks… Well not all of them, but a lot of them… No, I won’t name an-- … I’m not being disrespectful, I’m just saying I like A-class, all my friends are A-class.” The conversation continues like this for an hour.
It was hard for people to understand. Ranks and Class meant so little to Stein. Heroing was not a competition, it was a job, just like anything else. S-class did not offer anything he wanted, and it just meant he would have to attend those awful meetings. As A-rank, he could just show up to a high danger crisis, do his thing and not have to worry about the semantics. After all, those meetings were usually about how to save lives and property – which he had in spades. If anything, they needed him.
Stein’s thoughts were interrupted by a knock on his door. With a groan he rolled off the couch and yanked on some pants. When he opened the door, he was met with his cute neighbor in an arm sling. “Hey…”
“Sup?” Stein smiles. “You need help watering your plants again?”
The young redhead shakes her head and smiles. “No, just… baked you a thank-you pie. Cherry with chocolate chips and mint, I know it’s your favorite.” It was plastered on his fan page at this point… chocolate and mint anything was high on his list. “I thought I was going to die when that beam crushed me…”
Stein waved off the notion. “That was my bad… I had my phone on silent, I should have stopped all of that before it even happened. I’m just sorry I couldn’t instantly heal your arm.”
The young woman laughed. “Doctor said I should have had a collapsed lung and a dozen ruptured veins… I think you fixed the issues that mattered.” Stein nodded. He’d accept that much at least. She handed over the pie, complete with a quart of ice cream to melt over it. “Anyway, thanks.”
As she turned to leave, he watched her sashay away. “Hey,” he began. She turned and offered that cute, bright smile. “Would you…” He tried once more, but hesitated.
“Would I what?”
Like to catch a movie? Have dinner with me? Netflix and chill? No. “Would you like your pie tin back? I think I still have the one from last time.”
“Sure, just bring them over when you’re done, okay?”
He nodded. After nudging the door closed with his foot, a long, annoyed sigh escaped him. What was I thinking? Of course she’d say yes… Why would anyone say no? I saved her life, she’d be obligated. Hell, everyone would be obligated. Another downside of being a famous hero; dating sucked.
He returned to the couch. The pie tin burned his leg even through his pants, but his tough skin could handle it. He spooned some of the butterpeacon ice cream onto the crust and scooped up a hearty spoonful of the combination. Another successful mission, another boring night in: it made Stein almost miss his C-class days.
