Chapter 150
Added 2025-10-28 10:12:01 +0000 UTCThe northern wind howled like a living thing, dragging curtains of snow across the frozen plain. Kana moved through it in silenceâlittle more than a shadow gliding over white. Each breath came out as mist, quick and shallow, vanishing before it reached her eyes.
Earlier at camp, after Suri delivered the principalâs orders, Kana approached all her party members who had reached lvl 10 with the exception of Boris, Suri, Leo and Adam then left. It was strangely exciting and she learned many things about skills that didnât even have a record in the books.
Now, after hours of running, fatigue gnawed at her legs. Her heartbeat echoed in her ears, steady as a war drum. She could feel her focus slippingâthe telltale weight behind her eyes.
She needed shelter. To sleep.
She focused on her [High Awareness], a shimmer across her mindâs edge. Aheadâstone, hollowed, warmth trapped beneath ice. A perfect spot in a damn winter. A cave.
Kana stumbled in and let herself fall against the wall. The air smelled of old earth and mineral dust. It wasnât deep, but large enough to fit a dozen people. She throwed the fire stone like pebble into the firewoods that she had from her [Inventory], and faint light danced to lifeâpale, flickering, wrapping the space in a fragile glow. Tobyâs endurance buff had long faded; she could feel the cold creeping into her bones again.
She unwrapped a small cut of meatâfrom Suriâs stock of meat, no doubtâand skewered it on her blade. The fat hissed as it met the flame, releasing a sharp, savory scent that fought the smell of smoke.
It was strangely quiet. Too quiet.
No monsters. No sounds beyond the wind. Not even the distant cry of any animals.
Her brows furrowed. Something is wrong.
The northern dungeon overflow had never been silent. Even with Suriâs illusions or Ziaâs wards, the wilds always moved, always whispered.
Can they really control them all? she thought. The dungeon monsters⊠if so, if she could get one of them⊠Is it possible to make a makeshift dungeon to level up? Just for me?
If that was true, then whoever commanded them wasnât just powerfulâthey were organized. Intelligent. Dangerous.
Kana blinked once, her vision softening. The warmth of the fire was too comfortable. Her body sagged, consciousness slipping before she could even finish the meat.
Sleep came fast.
When her eyes opened again, it was too dark. The fire had died, leaving only embers glowing faintly red. Her breath misted in the cold air.
Outside, the snow whisperedâsoft, deliberate, like someone stepping just beyond sight. She continued her sudden journey deep in the dungeon.
âŠ..
Kana was long gone when Wor-en gathered the rest of the students.
âAs you all know, Kana had left first due to special quests assigned to her.â Wor-en said,âNow, things became more dire and serious than we had thought.â
âSoon, the main force of the north will march, and we will back them up to destroy the core of this whole dungeon.â Wor-en announced, âWe will camp and wait here until they arrive.â
The northern soldiers lifted their weapons and shouted, excited about what was about to come while the rest of the students grunted for another additional task.
Snow drifted lazily over the camp, hissing as it met the dying embers of the fire. The northern wind had gentled for once, leaving only the soft creak of leather and the muted clang of steel as the students checked their gear.
âSounds like a lot of work.â Toby yawned, sitting cross-legged near the fire. His breath came out in thin white streams. âI want to go home. I miss my bed.â
Rin rubbed her arms, her hood drawn tight. âWhereâs Kana going?â
âSince sheâs the fastest,â Suri said, still sketching faint runes in the snow beside her, âletâs just say she went ahead already.â
âI feel bad for her,â Toby murmured. âMy [Dispel Curse] only lasts a few hours. Once it wears off, sheâll start freezing again.â
The words lingered for a moment, swallowed by the cold. Each of them had seen Kana fightâher stubbornness, her quiet fireâand no one doubted sheâd keep moving. Still, they all knew how cruel northern nights could be.
While the others pondered the principalâs orders, the group of boys busied themselves with something practical.
Boris crouched beside the firelight, turning his spear under the glow. Faint cracks webbed along the silvered shaft, catching the light like cracks as if it were veins. âThis enchanted spear is more fragile than I thought.â
Leo leaned in, resting his sword against his shoulder. âThatâs what happens when your skillâs built for breaking things. You need durable enchanted weapons, not flashy ones.â
Adam grinned and hefted his axe, testing its edge with a thumb. âMy axe is still good as new.â
Roy sat nearby, wiping a thin dagger clean with a piece of cloth. The blade caught the firelight, glinting like glass. âThis one belonged to my skeleton summon. I bought it cheap, but it still cuts just fine. Sometimes the simplest tools last longest.â
Andel tilted his head, adjusting the strap of his lance. âYou should visit the shop where I bought mine. The ownerâs a bit eccentric, but the craftsmanshipâs unmatched. Mention my nameâyou might get a discount.â
Boris groaned, the spear shaft groaning with him as he flexed it. âThis is not good. Iâll have to borrow one from the northern soldiers before this thing snaps.â
The campfire crackled. Sparks drifted upward, vanishing into the dark. Around them, the night stretched cold and quiet, the kind of silence that always came before something stirred again.
âŠ
Kana slowed her breathing, the cold air burning her lungs. Two human voicesâshe was sure of itâbut all she saw was an eagle perched high on a snow-dusted branch. Its feathers shimmered faintly in the moonlight, as if catching more light than the night allowed.
Her instincts screamed wrong.
Then the eagleâs shadow moved.
It didnât stretch naturallyâit peeled off the branch, sliding down the trunk and pooling across the ground like living smoke. The darkness coalesced, folding itself into the shape of a man.
Kana gripped her dagger tighter.
Like the shadow man, she thought.
The man stepped into the light. Bald, clean-shaven, with a jaw like carved stone and a posture that spoke of precision. His movements made no sound at all. His fitted clothes bore faint glyphs that shimmered once and vanished.
His voice came deep and calm, the kind that silenced noise around it.
âStop what youâre doing, Artin. Youâve won.â
Kana blinked.
The eagle let out a cryâa strange sound, almost like a sighâand then its form shimmered. Feathers folded inward, bones cracked, and flesh rearranged with an audible snap. In its place stood a man: broad-shouldered, wearing a cloak lined with white fur. His grin was boyish, familiar.
âLong time no see, Kana,â he said.
Her tension eased, but only slightly. âGood to see you, Sir Artin.â
The bald manâs eyes flicked toward her. âI am Lex Tah. [Assassin] class. A royal knightâlike him.â
Kana nodded slowly. âIâm Kana. [Ranger]. I was told to come here.â
Artinâs smile softened. âYes. I specifically asked for you.â
For a heartbeat, they just stood thereâthe three of them framed by the quiet forest. The air was so still she could hear the faint crackle of frost forming on bark.
Then, quite suddenly, Artinâs stomach growled. Loudly.
He gave a sheepish laugh and rubbed the back of his neck. âAh⊠transformation magic messes with my insides. My stomach never keeps up.â
Lex clicked his tongue, crossing his arms. âI donât think so.â
âI like to think thatâs my charm,â Artin said with a grin that didnât quite reach his eyes.
Kana couldnât help but feel the tension between themâsomething unspoken, old, like steel dulled by time but never rusted.
They were royal knights. Seeing one was rare but seeing two at the same time? Her gut told her something big was coming.
âŠ.
Kana blinked as Lex dropped a small handful of gold into Artinâs waiting palm. The coins flashed bright in the dim lightâtoo bright for the place they stoodâand Kanaâs curiosity pried itself forward.
âWhatâs that for?â she asked.
Artin popped a piece of meat between his teeth and grinned, the animal side of him showing as his face shifted for a half-second into something primate like a monkey, then back again. âWe made a bet,â he said, chewing. âWhoâd get here first.â
âYou bet on me?â Kanaâs voice carried amusement and a little pride. âWhy me?â
Artin transformed his head back to monkey and shrugged, the motion loose and casual. âInstinct,â he said. âMy animal part told me to.â
Kana laughedâsudden and loud in the cold air, the sound echoing off the snow-laden branches. She had to clutch at her stomach to keep from doubling over. The sound surprised her as much as it did anyone else; people usually saw her as sharp and reserved, not given toâwellâthis. Artin watched her with a small, pleased expression, as if sheâd just done something sheâd been hiding.
âI didnât know you could laugh like that,â he said, half-teasing, half-wondering. âYouâre always so serious.â
She wiped the tears from her eyes and tried to compose herself. âSorry. Itâs justâyour face. It changes. Itâs ridiculous. I didnât know a monkey could talk.â she said, breath fogging with the words.
Artinâs grin softened. He tossed the remaining meat into the fire, letting the crackle swallow the moment.
Lex shifted, the movement like a shadow being pulled taut. âItâs time,â he said. He straightened, the furrow to his brow cutting the air into a harder edge. âTime to meet His Majesty.â
Before Kana could ask how, Lexâs form folded inward as if pressed by the night itself; then he was goneâno fanfare, no crack of soundâonly a faint warmth where heâd stood and the shadow remaining a fraction too long on the snow. Kana watched the place heâd been, fingers tightening on her bow.
âCan he really go to the capital like that?â she asked. There was a question in her voiceâhalf technical curiosity, half worry.
Artin shrugged again, more earnest this time. âYes. No. He can mark two points with his [Shadow Link],â he said. âIf the shadow is anchored, he can slip between them. He told me, regardless of distance, it would be shortened by one step. But it gets a chunk of his mana. Not to mention very long cooldowns. You donât do that on a whim.â
Kana absorbed that, the knowledge settling into her mind like another useful thing to catalog. âInteresting skill,â she murmured. âAndâwhy am I here, exactly?â
Artinâs smile broadened until it was nearly teasing. âWeâre here to rescue the crown prince,â he said. He delivered the line as if it were a joke, and maybe it wasâexcept for the way his eyes sharpened afterward. The flames painted his cheekbones with moving shadows; the seriousness returned.
Kana blinked. âSoundsâŠexciting,â she tried. It came out flat.
âNo,â she corrected, and the word struck itself on the cold. âNot at all. Iâd rather be killing dungeon monsters.â
Artin simply chuckled in response.
Too much hard work and Iâm not even going to get an exp.
Kana looked like she had no choice as soon as she arrived at the meet up point. Not to mention, they already told them a crucial piece of information.
Post note:
Initially there were a bunch of skills here displayed about our new lvl 10s. I was thinking that it was like too much dump info all at once so I decided to scrap it.
Since they are all going to use it in the future, I decided it would be better to show it later.
Hope you enjoy! đ
Comments
Thanks for the chapter! Also, good call on the lvl 10 Skills, we'll get to it when it becomes relevant
Bosparan
2025-10-28 18:27:39 +0000 UTCI agree; showing a block of other peoples skills would break the flow. Good chapter.
HikinBear
2025-10-28 15:09:31 +0000 UTC