His attention was grasped when he heard sounds coming from a direction that wasn't so far off. It would be scary if they were thieves, but just as expected, the sounds came from two deers. Who knew that they often wander at night? With excitement, Masami hurriedly climbed back down with ease, quietly; his training was put to use, being all sly and silent. He peeked from afar as if he was stalking humans instead of animals. He used to hunt in his younger days, often deer and boar, something big that can be consumed in dinner time. Usually, the deer senses the hunter before the hunter senses them. Recalling this, Masami became extra, extra careful – quietly making his footsteps and making sure he doesn't make that idiotic move of breaking a branch using the foot and causing noises.
Slowly, surely, Masami's calculation told him that he was about three meters away from the deer. Those two appeared quite big and very healthy looking, surely they'd make good dinner. One of them were already chomping upon the crops, which is quite bad, but it gave Masami an idea. Using Yubikiri, a tiny spell, he caused a small disruption to lure the deer away from the crops. They squealed when it worked, the deer ran off but not too far away. Having their head facing the opposite direction Masami is in, he snatched a cabbage off and threw it towards them. The deer took the bait; such hungry fellows. Masami couldn't help his excitement and with a cutting knife in his hand, he quietly dashed up to the animals and completed the hunt, then burned them with magic.
"I thought I was going to burn the whole farm!" Masami exclaimed, breathing deeply after openly roasting the two animals, but only slightly. They no longer moved nor took their breaths, but it was Masami who was finally relaxed. "Fire magic's pretty efficient!" knowing that the deers were too heavy for him, he grabbed one by the legs then pulled until he reaches the storage room's front door, then the other. It took him a while, he didn't want to ask for any help nor use any other tools. When he was done, he planted a smile on his face and said, "It's all finished, dinner time!" But then again, he couldn't help but yawn; he even had the farmer woken up and astonished, but took notice of the ruined crops and wasted cabbage. He could eat the deer another time, but tonight deserves a good ol' rest.