One dungeon.
The whole city woke up knowing it, and the knowledge sat differently from every countdown the system had produced before. This was not a countdown anymore. This was the last one, and everyone in Mythal understood that at the sa ti.
The final gate was called the Ashen Throne.
It sat in the central district, the largest gate that had ever appeared in Mythal, taller than the surrounding buildings, radiating a pressure people reported feeling two blocks away. The barrier had been pushed back three tis since the previous night. Network helicopters had joined the broadcast drones to capture it from every angle at once.
By dawn, the streets around it were impassable.
Not a crowd but the city.
It was also the sa kind of dungeon that had killed the Grave Wardens. The Ashen Cathedral footage was still circulating, a top-twenty team that had gone in and not co back out, and the system had given the final gate the sa na and the sa dark architecture.
Everyone watching understood what that ant. The last thing Mythal had to clear was built from the thing that had already proven it could kill the best.
Sora had been live since midnight. "One dungeon," she said. "Every C-rank gate in Mythal cos down to this. Every clear, every failure, every blue light we watched go out." She looked at the cara. "This is the last one."
Her viewer count had passed any number that ant anything to her, so she stopped reading it.
Haven’t slept in 24 hours!
My whole office is watching! Our boss even got food for everyone!
The guy next to on the train is already crying!
Why am I this nervous!?
"Because it matters," Sora said, reading the last one. "That’s why."
...
The elites arrived at the sa ti with one dungeon remaining.
Nobody was sticking this one out.
Raze was already at the barrier when Kai and Sera reached it. He looked at them and said nothing, the sa thing he did in the Storm Castle. Not dismissal. Raze was already counting them into the problem.
Elden Cross stood near the gate with his staff running, GaleWing’s mark on his shoulder. Mira Solt was a few feet off, her Titan Forge armor rebuilt since Storm Castle; the left side of the Storm King had caved in, now heavier than before. Lily Blue had drifted to the edge of the entry zone, Black Tide’s mark on her collar, her ghost arrows already turning slow circles while she read the gate instead of the people.
Victor Hale stood at the far right, wearing a dark suit over light combat gear. He was looking at the gate with his full attention, and then he looked at Kai, who held it and ran the sa check from his side.
Not now.
Both of them had recognized the fight coming and agreed without speaking that this was not its ti.
Sera stepped close. "Don’t make this about him."
"I’m not."
"Good." Her armor lit. "We have a dungeon first."
The gate pulsed once. The energy around it moved differently from any C-rank gate Kai had entered.
This one felt awake.
The entry window opened, and every elite moved at once.
...
Inside, the Ashen Throne was a cathedral built from the remains of sothing that had been powerful long enough to leave architecture behind.
Where the Cathedral footage had shown a ruin, this was intact. Black columns rose into a ceiling that burned with dark fire, the flas pulling light in rather than giving it off, so the deeper they went, the dimr the room beca.
The floor was carved with geotric lines that pulsed in ti with sothing Kai could not see.
Every hunter spread into a different section. This was not Storm Castle’s forced cooperation. This was a race, and everyone knew it.
Kai and Sera took the left corridor.
The first monsters ca out of the walls.
[Ashen Revenant.]
[Level 47.]
Armored figures that moved through the stone itself, erging half-ford before they solidified, weapons lit with the sa inward dark fire as the ceiling. Level forty-seven for the first corridor. The dungeon was not warming them up.
Kai moved before the first one finished erging. The Fractured Blade reached its arm before the creature pulled free of the stone, and the half-ford Revenant ca apart before it finished arriving.
Sera drove a light spear through the next two.
They kept moving.
The corridor forked, then forked again. From other directions ca the sounds of the other hunters in their own sections. Raze above them, the Blood Tyrant carrying through the stone. Mira’s heavy strikes from the right while Lily’s arrows were sowhere ahead.
Victor’s section was silent. That was more unsettling than the noise.
Twenty minutes in, the dungeon answered. The cathedral shook once, deep and structural, and the dark fire pulled brighter. Then every hunter heard the sa thing from every direction: massive doors opening at the center, the architecture rearranging to pull every path toward one room.
The throne room.
Every surviving hunter reached the entrance within a minute of each other.
...
What was on the throne was not sitting. It was waiting, which was a different thing. It had watched many hunters enter this room and had learned what they were going to try.
[Ashen Sovereign.]
[Level 49.]
Its face looked carved directly into the dark fla itself. Like the fire had learned how authority was supposed to look. It looked similar to the other Ashen beings from before.
Raze moved first.
The spear crossed the distance in a fraction of a second, and the Sovereign caught it in one hand, turning the force sideways instead of taking it; the impact splitting the floor in a line thirty feet long.
The fight began.
Raze at full Blood Tyrant full power. Mira drove into the Sovereign’s guard with the weight of her whole rebuilt fra. Lily’s arrows cycling through the stone to hit from angles the Sovereign kept having to turn for. Elden is laying down arcane pressure in asured bursts. Victor was working in exact, economical strikes, damage that did not look like much until it added up.
The Ashen Sovereign handled all of it.
Not winning. Handling. After the first few exchanges, it began routing their attacks into each other, using one hunter’s force to deflect another’s, turning the whole assault into sothing it was managing.
Kai watched it from the edge for thirty seconds, and then he understood what it was doing.
It was not fighting them.
It was controlling their movents.
Every ti two hunters started working together, the Sovereign broke them apart. Kai felt the pattern click into place hard enough that it almost annoyed him.
Then the Sovereign showed them it had been holding back.
It stopped spreading its attention. Everything had been split across six hunters folded onto one. A single arm ca down on Elden Cross with the full weight it had been dividing, and Elden was mid-cast, committed, too far into the channel to move.
He was not going to survive it.
Kai was too far to reach him.
He threw the explosion sword instead.
The General’s blade crossed the room and detonated against Elden’s side. The blast hurt him, broke his guard, and threw him off his feet. It also threw him clear of the Sovereign’s arm, which ca down on the empty stone where he had been and split it to the foundation.
Elden hit the ground, burned and bleeding and alive.
The Sovereign was already turning to the next one. It had decided to start removing people, and it was not going to stop at one. The execution swing ca around toward Mira, closest, still recovering her stance.
Sera got there first.
She pulled the light armor off her own body and threw it, and the golden plating wrapped Mira in the half-second before the blow landed. The strike hit the light and Mira behind it. The combined layer held, barely, Mira, driven to one knee with the armor cracking apart around her, but her body intact inside it.
Sera landed beside Kai with nothing left on her own fra.
Now everyone understood.
The Sovereign could have killed them at any ti and now it had finally decided to start. They had seconds before it chose another target.
Kai stopped reading the fight and thought about what the distortion did to things like this. The Sovereign followed rules but the distortion didn’t care about rules. He activated the emulation and compressed everything at once, the Fractured Blade glowing with heat visible across the room.
Sera shifted to pull the Sovereign’s attention.
Raze drove three strikes into its right side, not for damage but to force it to commit.
Lily put every arrow she had into its eyes.
The Sovereign began routing again.
But then Kai moved, and the entire system the Sovereign had built stopped working. The air-steps covered the distance from the room’s edge to the throne in movents that had no surface under them.
The Sovereign tracked him, and for the first ti, its response distribution broke. For one second, the Sovereign stopped controlling the fight.
Everyone else got an opening.
Kai drove the Fractured Blade through the center of the crown of dark fla and released everything. The dark fire that had been pulling light inward across the whole dungeon reversed. Every fla in every corridor and ceiling erupted outward at once, one bright discharge, and went out.
For one second, the room was lit instead of dark, the whole shape of the Ashen Throne visible for the first and last ti.
The Sovereign ca apart from the point of impact outward. The throne room forgot how to make noise.
[Dungeon Cleared: Multi-Team.]
[Ashen Sovereign Defeated.]
[Level Increased: 44 to 46.]
[True Fans: 1,847.]
[Distortion Threshold: Expanding.]
The notification stayed visible longer than system ssages normally did, as if sothing behind it was still observing him.
Eighteen hundred and forty-seven.
The number had jumped during the fight itself, the live broadcast feeding the system sothing it converted faster than any threshold before.
He closed the notifications, and Sera was beside him, armor gone, fully spent, standing.
Elden was upright with a hand pressed to his burned side. Mira was getting back to her feet inside the ruined shell of Sera’s light armor. Raze stood at the far wall. Victor was at the throne, not looking at the body but at the carved base, still trying to understand what the place had been before it was a dungeon.
Elden crossed to Kai. He looked at the scorch mark on his own side.
"You blew up," he said.
"You’d be dead otherwise."
Elden considered that. "Yes," he said. "I would."
He held out a hand, and Kai took it.
Victor looked up, and their eyes t across the quiet room, and this ti neither of them looked away.
The fight was over.
Whatever ca after the Ashen Throne was where the two of them would settle, and both of them knew it.
Then Victor looked away.
Kai’s attention caught on a necklace in the loot pile. Fire markings ran across the tal with small crystals glowed inside them. The necklace trembled before resign up from the pile and rushing towards Kai.
It stopped before him.
He blinked and then touched the necklace.
[Ashen Seal - Grade: S-Rank.]
[A necklace that lets the user control multiple objects around them and utilize the objects’ abilities. In addition, it adds twenty more points on all base stats.]
Kai’s eyes widened at the powers before his mind quickly grasped that he could use this with all his weapons. The others quickly rushed to grab the loot they wanted, and then they all ran for the exit as the Ashen Throne began to collapse.
...
The gate shattered from the inside out.
The light that ca out was larger than the others, the energy of the last C-rank dungeon in Mythal releasing all at once in a column that rose over the skyline and stayed there longer than any clear light before it.
The crowd’s sound was not cheering. It was older than cheering, all the fear and hope of the past weeks coming out at once. People were crying outside the barrier, not from upset, just full. A group of lower-ranked hunters who had watched since before dawn sat down on the pavent together without deciding to.
Sora watched the column fade and said nothing for a while.
It’s over!
The city did it!
I don’t know what to do now!
What happens next!
"I don’t know what cos next," she said. "The system has never shown us what it does after the last C-rank falls." She looked at the empty skyline. "But Mythal cleared every gate, and the last one fell to soone with no class."
Her chat went quiet for a few seconds. Millions of people waited to see if anyone else would disagree with her, but nobody did.
"I’ve been doing this since the first footage," she said. "Since the clip of him walking out of Black Vein Depth while Daniel’s team was still standing outside it. The system didn’t give him a class, and yet he just out-contributed the rank one against a level forty-nine boss." She looked at the dark skyline. "The system said null. He said otherwise."
She did not say anything else, because the silence was already saying it.
The skyline of Mythal was dark where the gates had been. And sowhere in the system, sothing that had been waiting for this began to move.
User Comments
0 comments from readers