Adam's Hunter's Tri-Sense—smell, vibration, and psionic echo—flared a warning even before the soft scuff of boots on stone became audible. He raised his head, his galactic eyes narrowing. The pleasant, post-meal calm evaporated.
"We've got company," he broadcast, his mental voice cutting through the contented silence. "Approaching from the eastern tunnel network. Multiple figures. Cautious. Coordinated."
A collective wave of annoyance rippled through his companions. They'd just relaxed for the first time in what felt like ages.
«Can't we ever have a peaceful meal?» Alice grumbled, rising to her paws, her void-tinged fur bristling slightly.
Ignis pouted, licking the last of the bird's flavor from her snout. «Are they more of those dusty munchers?»
"No," Adam said, focusing his senses. "The footfalls are too coordinated, The formation is tight. This isn't monster behavior." A slow, predatory smile touched his features. "It's humans."
The mood shifted instantly from annoyance to sharp, focused interest. For Adam's system and his Crown, and for the growth of his companions, humans were not just intruders; they were concentrated bundles of experience, potential skill fragments, and now, souls.
«Walking treasure chests,» Lilith purred psychically, her many eyes gleaming in the fungal light. «And often carrying magical items. How fortuitous.»
"Exactly," Adam agreed, his voice a low rumble. "A delivery of walking points, right to our doorstep. Finish up, everyone. We have guests to greet."
He didn't hide. He coiled his massive, obsidian-and-feather form deliberately in the center of the clearing, the dying embers of their cook-fire highlighting his impossible silhouette.
Alice sat regally at his right side, Ignis crouched with banked fire on his left, and Lilith melted into the shadows of a large fungal trunk behind them, becoming an unseen watcher.
Meanwhile, in the Eastern Tunnel…
"Steady," Resmond's voice was a tight, controlled whisper in the gloom. He led from the front, his hand resting on the hilt of his sun-forged longsword. His blonde hair was tied back, his handsome face set in grim lines, blue eyes scanning every shadow. "Advance by the book. Watch the ceiling, the walls. Tia, any readings?"
Behind him, moving with lethal grace, was the elite suppression team. They were a dozen strong, each a veteran of the dungeon wars.
Behind Resmond is Adel. Her close-cropped black hair was like a shadow against her scalp, and her stern, assessing gaze missed nothing. In her hands, twin short swords did not merely gleam; they crackled with arcs of blue-white lightning, casting frantic, jumping shadows on the walls and filling the silence with a soft, ominous hiss.
Beside her, Zen moved with a brawler's easy grace. His bald head and intricate tattoos told stories of their own, but it was his massive fists that commanded attention. They were wrapped in thick bandages that pulsed with a soft, ochre light—nullification magic meant to unravel spells and shatter supernatural defenses with every earth-shaking blow.
From behind them came the low, steady hum of Derek's composite bow. The ranger was a statue of concentration, his form clad in green-grey leathers that mimicked the forest moss. Behind his tactical visor, his eyes were sharp and unblinking, constantly scanning the gloom ahead, the bowstring taut and singing with latent energy.
A wall of polished steel and silent determination, Max formed the group's moving bulwark. His full plate armor and towering shield should have made him a cacophony of clanking metal, yet he moved with a surprising, unsettling quiet, a testament to impeccable skill. He was less a man and more a fortress on the march.
Flitting at the edges of the light was Jeff, a wiry silhouette. A worn bandana obscured the lower half of his face, but his keen eyes were always calculating angles and shadows. A dozen knives of various sizes were visibly sheathed across his body, each handle worn from use, promising swift and silent delivery.
The low grumble of Glock, the dwarf, was almost as constant as the clink of tools on his belt. His beard was braided with copper wires, and in place of his left arm was a formidable mechanical crossbow, its gears oiled and ready. His belt was a gallery of strange gadgets, each one a solution to a problem not yet encountered.
Around Pix, the very air seemed to vibrate. The petite spell-weaver's violet hair floated as if in a breeze only she could feel. Her fingers were never still, already tracing faint, shimmering runes in the air that hung for a moment before dissolving into motes of light, a prelude to the greater magic she held in check.
Next to pix is Leo, He wore patched, practical clothes and an oversized leather jerkin, burdened by a large, overstuffed canvas backpack. A simple dagger hung at his belt, and he moved with the restless, watchful energy of someone who survived by staying on the edge of danger.
Watching their backs and flanks were the final three. Tama, her heavy armor marked with old battle scars, held the rear with the immovable presence of seasoned heavy infantry.
Ken, the arcanist, clutched a crystal-topped staff, its core glowing with a soft, ready light as he monitored for magical disturbances. And Silas, the scout, had already melted into the darker recesses of the tunnel ahead, a whisper of motion ensuring the path was clear.
Tia, the green-haired Vice-Guild Master, held a pulsating crystal in her palm. Her brow was furrowed. "I'm picking up life signs ahead. Four of them. A tight cluster. No human bio-signatures in the mix, Resmond." Her voice held a note of professional disappointment and fresh dread.
"Just monsters then," one of the rear guards, Silas, muttered, his voice tense.
"We've strayed from the Vanguard's last known path," Derek the ranger noted, his voice calm. "This is a detour."
"A detour towards a cook fire," Jeff the rogue countered, his eyes sharp. "Don't be a coward. We follow the clues. If it's monsters, then they're monsters smart enough to cook their food. That's intel."
"Jeff's right," Pix the spell-weaver said, her voice soft but clear. "A sentient creature, even a monster, that understands cooking is either a potential source of information… or a threat of a completely different order. We proceed with extreme caution."
Resmond's heart ached at the confirmation of no human signs, but the logic cut through his grief. A smart monster might know what happened to Kaela. "We move forward. Stay sharp. I'll take point. Max, you're my shadow. Everyone else, standard diamond formation. If this is a trap, we spring it on our terms."
"You don't have to protect us all single-handedly, Resmond," Adel said, her voice firm as she fell into step beside him, her lightning blades ready. "We're all here because we can handle ourselves."
"Aye," grunted Glock the dwarf, hefting his crossbow-arm. "We didn't come down here to hide behind your shiny armor, lad. Let's see what's making dinner."
"Hold on, hold on," said a younger voice from the middle of the formation—a lean youth named Leo, carrying an overloaded pack. His eyes were wide. "We're talking about potentially intelligent monsters. Doesn't that scare anyone? Monsters don't do this. They don't cook!"
A seasoned warrior named Zen chuckled, the sound echoing in his broad chest. "Relax, kid. That's why you're still on porter duty. You overthink everything."
"He's not entirely wrong to be cautious," said Mara, the female arcanist, her tone analytical. "But it's more likely an accidental behavioral spike. Perhaps a predator caught prey near a geothermal vent and found the cooked meat more palatable. Learned behavior, not true intelligence."
"Or," suggested Silas, the scout, "it could be a bound familiar or summoned creature from a deceased mage. They sometimes retain conditioned habits from their masters—like expecting cooked food. If it's a stray, it might be confused, not inherently smart."
"And if it's not?" Leo pressed, his knuckles white on his pack straps.
"Then we kill it," Adel stated flatly, her grip on her lightning blades unwavering. "We're not rookies. We're A-rank, pushing S. Whatever's ahead, we handle it."
"Right," grunted Max from behind his tower shield. "So quit chattering and keep your eyes open. Porter or not, you let your guard down down here, you die."
Seeing the young porter's continued anxiety, Jeff the rogue pulled a small flask from his hip and offered it. "Here. A sip. Calms the nerves. Just a sip, mind you."
Leo took it gratefully, coughing slightly at the strong spirit. "Thanks. I… I just get nervous in new biomes."
"How long have you been at this, kid?" Jeff asked, taking his flask back.
"Two years," Leo admitted.
A few surprised glances were exchanged. Derek the ranger whistled softly. "Two years as a dungeon porter starting at… what, sixteen? That's a hard life for anyone, let alone someone your age."
"I have to," Leo said, his voice gaining a thread of steel. "My little sister… she's sick. The temple healers can help, but it's not free. I need the coin from every run."
A moment of respectful silence followed. Then Pix, the violet-haired spell-weaver, spoke up gently. "Once we're back on the surface, bring her to the Guild annex. I was a temple acolyte before I specialized in combat arts. I'm no high priestess, but I'm a decent diagnostician. I'll take a look at her, no charge."
Leo's face lit up with desperate hope. "R-really? You mean it?"
"I do. Consider it a professional courtesy."
"Thank you! Thank you so much! I won't ever forget this!"
"Enough," Resmond's voice cut through, low and urgent. All chatter died instantly. "We're close. Weapons ready. Shields up. Form up on me."
The team moved into a perfected combat formation, all traces of casual conversation gone, replaced by the cold, focused professionalism of veterans. They rounded the final fungal thicket, weapons at the ready, spells simmering at fingertips—and stopped dead.
The clearing before them was illuminated by the dying embers of a large fire. In the center, coiled like a mountain of living shadow and starlight, was a serpent of impossible scale. Obsidian scales gleamed, feathered wings of deepest night were folded against its flanks, and its eyes held swirling galaxies. A crown of dark iron sat upon its head. Flanking it were a panther woven from void and arrogance, a small but intensely fiery drake cracking its neck eagerly, and from the shadows behind them, the elegant, chilling form of a spider the size of a warhorse emerged, her many eyes fixed on them.
The smell of roasted bird still hung in the air.
For a long, breathless second, the two groups simply stared at each other. The humans saw not mindless beasts, but a tableau of terrifying, coordinated intelligence and power. Adam and his companions saw a neat, organized line of walking Experience Points, Evolution Points, and potential Souls.
Adam's voice, a deep, resonant rumble that vibrated in their very bones and echoed directly in their minds, broke the silence.
"Welcome," the Eclipse Dragon Serpent said, his galactic eyes fixed on Resmond. "We've been expecting a delivery."
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