The entrance was a drain.
Not taphorically. An actual drainage channel in the floor of a tannery basent three streets from the records annex — a iron grate set into the stone, corroded to the color of old blood, covering a shaft that dropped eight feet into a passage that ran south beneath the guild district. Sera had found it in the Assessor’s Guild’s oldest records, filed under Infrastructure Anomalies — Pre-City, which was the bureaucratic equivalent of a room where things got put when nobody knew what to do with them.
"Pre-city," Kael said, looking at the grate.
"The catacombs predate Valdenmoor by at least three hundred years," Sera said, consulting her prepared pages in the tannery’s dim light. "Whatever was here before the city built over it. The Church’s records acknowledge the catacombs exist but classify them as structurally unstable and off-limits." She paused. "Which in Church language ans contains sothing we don’t want people finding."
"Or sothing that doesn’t want to be found," Maren said.
They both looked at the Lich.
"Both," Maren anded. "Probably both."
They had spent the forty-eight hours carefully.
Kael had slept — actually slept, six hours, on a cot in the records annex while Maren stood in the basent with the minions and his mother reorganized the kitchen with the focused energy of a woman who processed anxiety through productivity. He’d woken to find the annex considerably more functional than it had been, a hot al on the table, and Sera asleep in a chair with her notebook still open in her lap.
He’d let her sleep another two hours. She hadn’t thanked him for it but she’d been sharper than usual all morning, which was thanks enough.
The Watch units had swept the Ashrow twice in the first twenty-four hours and expanded to the market district in the second. The Ring showed Level 22 Ranger whenever anyone’s assessnt gaze passed over Kael, which happened four tis during supply runs and twice during the route to the tannery. None of them paused.
His mother had established three rules for the annex in his absence: no minions above the basent during daylight, no System notifications spoken aloud near windows, and dinner at the sa ti every evening regardless of what was happening.
He had agreed to all three without argunt, which seed to surprise her.
Maren had spent the forty-eight hours reading Sera’s copies of its own research docunt and making annotations in a handwriting that had not changed in seventeen years, which Kael found quietly extraordinary.
Now they stood around an iron drain in a tannery basent.
[IRON CATACOMBS — ENTRANCE DETECTED]
[DUNGEON CLASSIFICATION: ANCIENT — PRE-SYSTEM]
[FLOORS: 5 CONFIRD]
[FLOOR BOSSES: PARTIALLY DETECTED — INTERFERENCE FROM DUNGEON AGE]
[DEATH SENSE RANGE: REDUCED 40% — DUNGEON DAMPENING ACTIVE]
[WARNING: THIS DUNGEON PREDATES THE SYSTEM. STANDARD CLASSIFICATIONS MAY NOT APPLY.]
[RECOMNDED LEVEL: 30 ]
[YOUR CURRENT LEVEL: 20]
[NOTE: RECOMNDED LEVELS ARE CALCULATED FOR STANDARD MULTIPLIERS.]
Kael read the warning about pre-System classification twice.
"What does it an that it predates the System?" he asked Maren.
"It ans the creatures inside were not created or governed by the System’s architecture." Maren’s disguised face was thoughtful. "The System erged approximately two hundred years ago — before that, death was simply death. No Classes, no multipliers, no experience. Whatever lives in those catacombs has existed outside the System’s frawork for at least three centuries." A pause. "They will not behave like dungeon creatures. They will not follow patterns the System has catalogued. And killing them — " Another pause, more deliberate. "The experience yield from pre-System creatures is uncharted. Nobody knows what the numbers look like."
Kael looked at the drain.
"Uncharted," he said.
"The last Death’s Chosen who ran a pre-System dungeon — " Maren stopped.
"What happened?"
"The records are incomplete." A very careful pause. "The Church confiscated them."
Of course they had.
Kael pulled the grate up. It ca away with a sound of protesting iron and settled dust. Cold air breathed up from the shaft below — not the dungeon cold of the Greymaw, which had been sharp and mineral. This was older. Deeper. The cold of sothing that had been sealed for a long ti and rembered being sealed.
"Formation," he said.
His nineteen minions assembled from the bond space — crawlers, beetles, Daren, Thresh, the two wraiths, the shadow wolf, the troll settling into position with its slow deliberate weight. Ember could not fit the shaft so he left her bonded to the cooperage. The troll was going to be tight but possible.
Maren dropped its disguise. In the dim tannery light the Lich was simply itself — desiccated and precise and Level 35 and carrying seventeen years of compacted dungeon power that Kael could feel through the Sovereign bond like a second sun at the edge of his awareness.
"No point maintaining it underground," Maren said.
"Agreed."
Sera had her notebook and a lantern and the expression of soone who had already decided they were doing this and found the fear response unnecessary. She’d added a short blade at her hip since the Greymaw — Level 14 Assessor Class ca with combat training she’d never ntioned until Kael had asked and she’d shown him the scar along her left forearm from a Level 18 dungeon spider three years ago.
"Assessors do fieldwork," she’d said simply. "I wasn’t always behind a desk."
He dropped into the shaft first.
Floor one of the Iron Catacombs was a corridor.
Not a chamber — a corridor, running straight into darkness in both directions, the walls dressed stone fitted without mortar in a style that predated anything Kael recognized from the city above. Iron fixtures every twenty feet held the burned-out ghosts of old torches, long since consud. The floor was smooth from centuries of use.
Soone had walked this corridor regularly. For a very long ti.
Death Sense swept forward — reduced range, the dampening cutting his normal thirty ters to eighteen — and found:
[DEATH SENSE — REDUCED RANGE — FLOOR 1]
[DETECTING: UNKNOWN ENTITIES x23]
[CLASSIFICATION: NON-STANDARD]
[LEVEL RANGE: UNREADABLE]
[NOTE: PRE-SYSTEM ENTITIES DO NOT REGISTER STANDARD LEVEL TRICS]
[THREAT ASSESSNT: INSUFFICIENT DATA]
No levels. No classifications. Nothing to plan around except the fact of twenty-three sothings in the dark ahead.
Maren stepped up beside him, studying the corridor with its ancient eyes. "I can feel them," it said quietly. "Old death. Very old. Not hostile yet — they’re aware of us but they haven’t decided what we are."
"How long before they decide?"
"That depends on what we do in the next thirty seconds."
Kael thought about what he was — what the Class had made him, what the Protocol had deepened him into. Death’s Chosen. The space between living and dead. The thing the altar had cracked for.
He didn’t draw a weapon. He didn’t advance the formation.
He simply opened the Class fully — the sa thing he’d done with the Dungeon Wraith, the sa instinct he’d used on Maren. Dropped every concealnt and let the grey cold of Death’s Chosen fill the corridor like a tide coming in, quiet and inevitable and completely without aggression.
I am what you ca from, he said without words. You know what I am.
The darkness at the end of the corridor shifted.
Sothing ca forward.
It was tall — nearly two ters, thin in the way that extre age makes things thin, wrapped in the remnants of clothing that had long since passed beyond any identifiable style. Its face was preserved in a way that suggested neither the dungeon’s crude reanimation nor the System’s clean raising — sothing older and stranger, sothing that had simply continued without any external agency deciding it should.
It stopped ten feet from Kael.
Its eyes were open. They were the color of deep amber, lit from sowhere behind them with a light that had nothing to do with the lantern Sera was holding.
It looked at him for a long mont.
Then it spoke — in a language that Kael’s mind processed as sound but his bones translated into aning, bypassing language entirely the way the System sotis did, depositing understanding directly.
You are the new one, it said. We have not felt your kind in a very long ti.
"How long?" Kael asked.
Long. A pause that carried the weight of centuries in it. The last Death’s Chosen who walked here — we gave them passage. They promised to return. They did not.
"What happened to them?"
The amber eyes moved — sothing old and tired in them. The city happened. The Church happened. The things that always happen to your kind.
Kael looked at the figure. He looked at the corridor behind it — at the twenty-two other shapes he could feel through Death Sense, waiting, watching.
"I’m not passing through," he said. "I’m here to run this dungeon. To clear it."
A silence that felt like held breath spread through the corridor.
Clear it, the figure repeated.
"Yes."
You intend to fight us.
"If necessary."
The amber eyes held his for a long mont. Then sothing moved in them — not quite amusent, not quite respect. Sothing that had been waiting for a very long ti for soone to say that particular thing in that particular tone.
The dungeon has a master, it said. *In the deep. Five floors down. It has held us here since before your city existed, bound us to this place the sa way the dungeon bound your companion — * its eyes moved briefly to Maren — to the floor above.
Kael went very still.
"A dungeon master," he said.
Ancient. Pre-System. It bound us here when we died here, centuries ago, and has fed on our death energy since. It is why this dungeon exists. A pause. If you defeat the master, the binding releases. We are free.
"And in exchange?"
The amber eyes returned to him steadily. *Passage. Knowledge. And this — *
It reached into the remnants of its clothing and produced sothing that had no business being intact after three centuries — a small book, hand-bound, the cover material unidentifiable, the pages visible at the edges covered in dense notation.
[ITEM DETECTED:]
[ANCIENT CODEX — PRE-SYSTEM]
[CONTENTS: DEATH MAGIC THEORY — PRE-SYSTEM THODOLOGY]
[NOTE: THIS KNOWLEDGE PREDATES THE SYSTEM’S CLASSIFICATION FRAWORK]
[WARNING: CONTENTS MAY CONFLICT WITH CURRENT SYSTEM PARATERS]
[ESTIMATED VALUE: INCALCULABLE]
Maren made a sound that was not quite a gasp. In seventeen years Kael had not heard Maren make any sound that wasn’t deliberate.
"What is it?" Kael asked without taking his eyes off the figure.
"Pre-System death theory," Maren said, very quietly. "I spent fourteen years looking for references to this. The Church burned every copy they found." A pause. "That book should not exist."
The figure held it out.
"If I defeat the dungeon master," Kael said.
Yes.
He looked at the book. He looked at the corridor. He looked at the twenty-two shapes in the dark behind the figure — old dead things bound to a place they hadn’t chosen, waiting for soone to either fight them or free them.
He thought about Maren on the dungeon throne for seventeen years.
He thought about his mother’s cracked hands.
He thought about every person the System had bound to a Level they hadn’t chosen and told it was holy.
"Stand aside," he said. "We’re going to the fifth floor."
The figure stepped back.
The twenty-two shapes in the dark parted.
The corridor opened ahead of them, and Kael walked into it with nineteen minions and a Sovereign Lich and an ex-Assessor with a notebook, and the old dead things watched him pass in silence that felt like held breath finally let go.
User Comments
0 comments from readers