[center][h2]Fujiwara no Mokou[/h2][/center] With the green miko's statement providing a rather welcome distraction from the state of the revolting boar--seriously, what was that rabbit [i]doing,[/i] going around phrasing things like that? Showing Kaguya around was one thing, but it wasn't as if there was any sneaking involved... Eientei was [i]hers[/i], after all, and it wasn't as if she was obliged to never leave it. Well, Kaguya's introduction to Japanese customs [i]had[/i] been around her own childhood, so maybe the norms had stuck more... Of course, that was when the miko started screaming and there were now a whole lot of centipedes. That was... concerning. Like any reasonable, experienced inhabitant of Gensokyo at this point, she opted to take the smart choice and get the hell off the ground. Except... they were in the trees, too? Which now meant one of them was [i]on her.[/i] From the look of the boar, getting bit by these things would be excruciatingly painful. Then they'd eat her. She didn't [i]think[/i] it was likely, but the last thing she wanted to add to the world by being eaten was some immortal venomous centipede that would go on to be a weird antisocial youkai in a couple of centuries. So she took the one that had landed on her shoulder and [b]burned[/b]. One crispy centipede later and... how the hell were there so many of these? The shrine maiden sort of had the right idea, spraying ofuda everywhere--though that added dodging her wild attempts to the whole issue of dodging the centipedes--but cleaning all of them up was going to be a pain. Well, a pain with other people here, the forest seemed damp enough that it [i]might[/i] not catch alight. Still, her usual less danmaku-heavy methods would work quite well, here: just point and [i]boom.[/i] One reasonably-sized fiery explosion, one less patch of centipedes. Hm, hopefully this pace wasn't too slow...