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Now reading: Chapter 846: Treasure and Danger (2) from The Eccentric Entomologist is Now a Queen's Consort, a Action novel by Arkalphaze.

"Fine. But if you collapse, I reserve the right to criticize your timing in detail."

"If I collapse, I reserve the right to haunt you."

"That feels unfair. You already have enough presence while alive."

That almost made her smile. Almost. She strangled it before it could fully form.

Mikhailis crouched again and began reorganizing the ants with a few gestures and quick taps through the manual interface.

"New arrangent," he said. "Two soldier ants stay here. One at the chamber entrance. One farther back on the wider angle. If sothing gets past the first, the second gets the honor of taking it personally."

The two soldier ants clicked once and settled harder into position.

"Eight workers continue widening the pocket and marking the route back. Quietly. No ambitious architecture. No decorative flourishes. We are not building a sumr house."

The worker ants moved imdiately, biting into the next seam with their eerie little work rhythm.

"The remaining seven workers and three soldiers co with us."

Rhaen watched the repositioning with a mix of fascination and unease. "We're not planning to fight?"

He glanced at her. "Only if the dungeon insists on being rude. The goal is mapping. Structure, safe lanes, dead zones, edible routes, water points, old architecture, pressure seams, and anything else that tells us where we are and where we are not supposed to keep breathing."

"That sounds almost responsible."

"Don't say that too loudly. I have an image to maintain."

They left the pocket a few minutes later.

The route beyond was tighter than before, but no longer blind. Worker ants slipped ahead through seams too narrow for human shoulders. One group left fine scored marks along the wall and floor, tactile route signs carved with unnatural precision. Another checked unstable edges, testing stone with light bites and short clicks before signaling back. The soldier ants stayed near enough to respond, far enough not to drag unwanted attention into every step.

Mikhailis cycled through the feeds in his glasses with patient, manual precision. Without Rodion the interface was slower and far more annoying, but it still gave him enough to layer a map from fragnts: one angle over another, movent over mory, guess over structure.

He did not go looking for fights.

That, Rhaen noticed quickly, was not cowardice.

It was economy.

At one bend, a low-bodied cave thing with too many jointed legs clung to the wall, nearly invisible against the mineral dark. Mikhailis caught it through a side feed before either of them stepped into range. Instead of drawing steel, he flicked a shell fragnt down another seam. A worker ant followed it with a precise clicking pattern. The creature turned toward the false signal and vanished after it.

"You bait monsters with noise?" Rhaen asked.

"I bait everyone with sothing. Monsters are simply more honest about their motivations."

A little later, pale dust shimred too neatly in the air ahead.

Mikhailis stopped so abruptly that Rhaen nearly walked into his back.

"Don't breathe deeply," he said.

"That would have been useful before the sentence ended."

He crouched, touched the wall, and narrowed his eyes at the faint drifting cloud. "Spore field. Sleep-inducing if we're lucky. Organ-lting if the dungeon is feeling creative."

"How do you know?"

"Book. Pattern. Also basic resentnt." He pointed. "See how the dust hangs instead of falling?"

She did.

He redirected two workers through a narrow crack above the field. Monts later the ants bit through so damp growth or seep pocket overhead, and a thin line of water began dripping through the spores, dragging them down just enough to open a clean path along the wall.

Rhaen gave him a long look. "You are far too comfortable underground."

"Comfort is just fear with good posture."

"That sounds like sothing you tell yourself in the dark."

"It works, so I keep using it."

The deeper they went, the more Ashen River stopped feeling like a broken route and started feeling like the remains of intention.

Old cut stone appeared under mineral crust. Twice they passed collapsed support geotry hidden under natural-seeming growth. Heavy mana seams ran in dark veins through the walls. Here and there the worker ants found traces of carving worn almost smooth, and once a broken corner of sothing that had very clearly once been a shaped block, not ordinary rock.

The air changed too.

Cooler pockets moved through the lower paths, suggesting much larger spaces sowhere ahead. Scattered objects surfaced half-buried in the dust: fragnts of tal, cracked handles, broken fittings, the suggestion of hinges, the corner of sothing that might once have been part of a sealed box.

Rhaen slowed near one such piece. "This isn't just a lower route."

"No."

"It was built. Or managed."

Mikhailis touched one exposed seam with the back of his fingers. "At least partially. Maybe not recently. Maybe not for a very long ti. But yes."

"And that ans…"

"That everyone above had reasons to be greedy that were not entirely fictional."

She looked down the corridor ahead and felt the shape of the whole conflict change again.

Not just ritual.

Not just doctrine.

Not just regional control.

Sothing old lay under Ashen River that had made countries circle it like starving animals.

A shell-backed scavenger nearly ended the thought.

It dropped from a side lip with a dry scrape, body wide and plated, mouth parts opening toward the nearest mana source. Rhaen's hand was already on her blade when Mikhailis caught her wrist.

"Not yet."

The creature had not fully seen them. One worker ant was closer. Mikhailis flicked a tiny pellet across the floor. It cracked against stone and released a hard tallic scent. The scavenger froze, turned, and went toward the stronger bait signal instead.

Only when it was gone did he release her.

"You stop people from fighting like it offends you personally," she muttered.

"It does. Fighting is expensive."

"And dying isn't?"

"Dying is extrely expensive. That's why I avoid paying retail."

Later, when the path narrowed enough that they had to move single file, Rhaen found herself watching him more than the walls.

This was not what she had expected exploration with Mikhailis to feel like.

She had expected recklessness dressed in intelligence. Or absurdity. Or so privileged kind of cleverness that only worked because other people stood close enough to absorb the consequences.

Instead she found patience.

Layered preparation.

Curiosity that sharpened danger rather than denying it.

And, unexpectedly, a refusal to waste lives cheaply, even ant lives.

When one worker lost footing on a broken seam, he stopped and waited instead of treating it like a disposable tool. It was a small thing.

It stayed with her.

The last turn ca after a long descending curve where the air changed again.

Not fresher.

Broader.

The workers ahead clicked differently. One after another, their feed angles opened into dark that did not end right away.

Mikhailis slowed.

Rhaen felt it too.

Space.

They ca through one final narrow seam, brushed past a jut of black stone, and the world widened.

The first thing was architecture.

Not complete walls, not so neat intact hall, but enough to know this place had once been shaped with purpose. Pillar bases. Broken ledges. Fitted stone lines beneath mineral crust.

Then ca light.

Not torchlight.

Reflection.

Small glints at first. Then larger. Then too many.

Then material richness struck all at once.

tal. Gold-toned surfaces half-buried under dust. Mana-rich alloys with pale inner shine. Old weapons arranged by collapse rather than ceremony. Sealed containers. Ceremonial objects crusted with age but still obviously expensive. Gems set into broken fittings. Chests with reinforced bands. Relic-like objects whose value was not only monetary but political. Tablets. Cases. Fine tools. Crafted things that kingdoms would not rely buy, but kill to claim.

Rhaen forgot to breathe for a second.

The chamber stretched farther than the first glance could hold.

This was not a lucky pile of valuables.

This was state-level wealth.

The kind of chamber that could justify lies, holy language, military plans, treachery, negotiations, and years of carefully disguised hunger.

"So," Mikhailis said softly, "that explains several forms of bad behavior."

Rhaen turned slowly, taking in the scale, the richness, the terrible calm of so much untouched value below a region already tearing itself apart.

She had seen noble houses. War chests. Temple vault rumors. rchant reserve ledgers copied in secret.

This was beyond them.

"It's all expensive," she said, and hated how small the sentence sounded.

Mikhailis, anwhile, had already begun sorting the chamber in his mind.

Not by beauty.

By category.

Monetary worth. Magical worth. Political worth. Transport difficulty. Claim legitimacy. What could be moved quietly. What could destabilize a court if revealed. What might force foreign powers to redraw entire strategies.

He crouched near one half-buried case but did not touch it.

"So of this matters more than gold," he murmured.

Rhaen tore her gaze from a row of relic weapons to look at him. "That's your first thought?"

"It should be yours too."

She looked back at the chamber.

He was right.

That was the worst part.

Then the ants froze.

Every single one of them.

The worker feeds in his glasses stopped moving for one long beat.

One went dark.

The chamber, already quiet, went quieter still.

Not silence.

Expectation.

Sothing vast had shifted its attention toward them.

Not like a monster lunging.

Not like a simple predator slling prey.

A presence.

Ancient enough, powerful enough, wrong enough, that the treasure around them suddenly felt secondary.

Rhaen felt the back of her neck go cold.

Mikhailis straightened slowly.

Sowhere in the unseen depth of the chamber, sothing had woken.

And it was looking at them.

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