Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 98 - 98 from Who Designed This Dungeon, a Action novel by ANeet0001.

For a ti, the elite adventurers of Bedford City had vanished, leaving the rest of the guild oppressed under the Light Eagle Corps and the city guards. Spirits had been at an all-ti low.

Everyone assud that after clearing the dungeon, the strategy team had simply moved on to conquer others.

Now that they had returned, it felt like a jolt of courage straight to the heart.

"Yah-ho! Hello, everyone, nya~!"

Maru waved energetically to the crowd—but the atmosphere inside the guild felt strange.

"What's wrong with everyone? You all look so panicked."

"Maru, don't tease them," Leon sighed, his golden hair gleaming as brilliantly as ever. He ruffled her head, earning a sheepish laugh in return.

Terl and Drew took in the familiar sight of the Adventurers' Guild's interior, a sense of relief easing their tension for a mont. But with danger still looming, there could be no true peace until the monsters were dealt with for good.

"I've already heard the situation," Leon said, clearing his throat. His voice was steady, resolute.

"The most important thing right now is to protect the city. We absolutely cannot allow the monsters to break through the gates—or harm a single civilian.

I have both good and bad mories of this place… but regardless, it's the city I live in every day. I'll never hand it over to monsters!

That is my duty as an adventurer!"

No one knew what Leon had gone through during his ti away, but it was clear he had changed. His presence was more composed, his expression more seasoned—like a man who had weathered storms. He even seed taller, his fra broader, his bearing heavier with experience.

The Leon who once lied to save face was gone.

It wasn't just Leon. Terl had also grown, his physique filling out until he looked every bit the formidable orc warrior. Drew's race prevented him from growing taller, but his old hunchback had vanished—he now stood straight and confident.

"I'll help too, nya~!"

Maru, by contrast, had changed the least—her hair was longer, lending her a touch of gentleness. But the mont she opened her mouth, her true personality shone through.

The adventurers exchanged glances. Then, one by one, smiles broke out as voices rose:

"That's right—protect the city! Count in!"

"My blade's been thirsting long enough!"

Even the old janitor tossed aside his broom and declared with righteous fervor,

"I was once an adventurer too—until I took an arrow to the knee! Give a weapon, and I can still fight!"

He was promptly dragged off to the rest area by the frail front-desk girl, who looked completely exasperated.

Of course, so adventurers still looked hesitant. No doubt, they'd quietly slip away later rather than stay and fight.

But that was their choice. Whether they stayed or fled—no one had the right to force or condemn them.

"Quite the enthusiasm."

Slow, rhythmic clapping echoed as Sid descended the stairs, a warm smile lighting his aged face.

"The Adventurers' Guild is issuing an ergency commission—defend Bedford City. All participants will be rewarded according to their contributions. Specific terms will be announced shortly."

The promise of rewards sent another wave of cheers through the hall, bolstering Leon's rallying call. Incentives always worked—whether in dungeon expeditions or on the battlefield.

"Mr. Sid," Leon stepped forward. "Do you know why the dungeon went berserk?"

Leon had fond mories of that place—not just because it was the first dungeon he'd ever cleared, but because of its legends, its treasures, and the items that had made him stronger.

Sid didn't answer imdiately. Instead, he rested a hand on Leon's shoulder, giving it a firm squeeze.

"The Sword Saint trained you well," he said. "Just a few days, and you've already grown this much. It won't be long before you reach Gold-rank."

"It's thanks to your teleportation scroll," Leon said sincerely. "Without it, we never would've found the Sword Saint so quickly."

Sid nodded. "Then prove it in battle. Show how far you've co."

"Yeah."

Leon tightened his grip on his sword. He, too, wanted to know—how strong had he truly beco after all that training?

The straight blade shimred faintly with magic.

And co to think of it, his sister's birthday was coming up soon. It would soon be ti to go ho.

The Adventurers' Guild's mobilization was a success.

But not every faction with fighting power reached the sa decision.

(***)

The Holy Light Church, Bedford Branch

Inside the cathedral, sacred hymns echoed softly. Sunlight stread through stained glass, scattering prismatic colors across the floor. The faceless statue of the God of Light gazed down from above.

"The dungeon has fallen into chaos," murmured the hunchbacked bishop. His eyes glead as he fixed a sharp stare on the Holy Light Knight before him.

Arbuda—once Leon's dungeon companion, now vice-captain of the Bedford branch's knight squad. Only the Church's main headquarters granted the rank of captain or vice-captain; branch leaders bore the title of "squad captain."

His face was as cold and impassive as ever.

"This is the dungeon you guaranteed?" the bishop snapped. "The one you said was blessed by the gods? Said to commune with the divine? I say it's a den of demons! Were it not for your assurance, I'd have already declared it heretical and ordered its destruction!"

Arbuda bowed his head in silence. Then, after a pause, he replied calmly,

"The rcenaries and Count Philip's atrocities provoked the dungeon. Its outburst was self-defense."

The bishop inhaled sharply, ready to argue—

—but Arbuda suddenly lifted his head, voice ringing with fervor.

"As a faithful servant of my God, my blessed eyes can judge heresy without error!"

His gaze burned with zealous intensity, not at the bishop, but at the faceless statue above them.

"…"

The bishop faltered, then nodded slowly.

"I believe you, Arbuda. You are the most devout, most fanatical servant of our God. I may doubt others—but never you. Your loyalty is beyond question."

He lifted his scepter, the jewel atop it glinting faintly.

"Go. Lead the knights. Quell the dungeon's wrath. And if necessary…"

A shadow crossed his eyes.

"…slay the Count to appease it."

.

..

...

Outside the Church

Alone at last, Arbuda's stoic mask cracked. The face of a man nearing forty sagged with fatigue.

"Pretending all the ti… it's exhausting."

(***)

Lord's Manor

Count Philip wheezed violently, coughing between gasps for breath until he could speak again, voice ragged and hoarse.

"Gather every soldier! Defend the walls to the death! No retreat—none at all!"

He turned to Sali, eyes wild. "Where's your companion? Where is the Hero?"

His gaze burned into Sali, desperation and madness mingling. In a ti like this, a Hero was the greatest guarantee of survival.

"Elsa went to save people," Sali answered quietly, unnerved by how beastlike his father now looked—more cornered animal than man.

When… when had his father changed so much?

"Save people? At a ti like this, you let her run off to save people? What have you learned from ?!"

Rage twisted the Count's face—but this ti, Sali stood his ground.

"That is the Hero's duty! If she sees people being slaughtered and does nothing, then what kind of Hero would she be?!"

"You—!"

The Count jabbed a trembling finger at his son, words choking in his throat. When had this boy grown so unfamiliar—so defiant?

"Count, my lord!"

A panicked servant burst in.

"The monsters—they're at the walls! The Light Eagle Corps is holding them off!"

The inner wall of Bedford towered forty to fifty ters high.

That absurd height had been the work of the first Lord of Bedford, who, after following the first king into war and facing giants a hundred ters tall, had beco so terrified that he ordered the construction of colossal walls.

Funds had run out, and only half had ever been completed. The outer wall remained ordinary in comparison.

Now, rcenaries and hastily assembled guards scrambled to haul supplies up the walls in preparation for defense.

A black tide of monsters surged forward, clouds of darkness rolling overhead wherever they passed.

On the battlents, Gelka stood beside Elsa, giving a low whistle.

"Never seen this many monsters before," he muttered. "Makes the battle on the Mo-Stone Plains look like child's play."

He sneaked a glance at Elsa—only to find her staring blankly at the horde, not listening at all.

A little disappointed at losing his chance to brag, he tried another approach.

"You're strong, girl. What's your na? Ever thought about joining up with us? The perks are great."

He grinned. "With your strength, the captain would probably make you a squad leader."

"I'm El—"

Elsa froze. Sali's warning echoed in her mind:

Listen. Don't tell suspicious people your real na—especially shady n. So charm spells only need your true na to work!

It had been half a scare tactic, but naïve Elsa had taken it to heart.

Call her pure, call her simple—her mind held nothing but killing demons. For everything else, she was hopelessly clueless.

"…I'm Gres," she blurted, borrowing the na of a hero from a novel she'd read. Then she asked, completely out of place,

"Will joining you help find companions?"

Gelka blinked, staring at her face. She was dead serious. Then he burst into laughter.

"In the Light Eagle Corps, there's no such thing as 'companions'—"

Disappointnt flickered in Elsa's eyes.

"But," Gelka continued, spreading his arms with a half-smile, "we're all family. And family doesn't need words like 'companion.'"

Elsa's eyes brightened instantly.

"So?" Gelka grinned. "What do you say? Join us. I'll let you in on a secret—the captain's a real looker. One glance and you'll be smitten."

Before Elsa could respond, the watchman's horn blared.

War had arrived.

"Damn sha," Gelka muttered, clicking his tongue as he waved a hand. "Let's survive this first. Wish luck, and I'll wish you the sa. We've got to live."

Elsa nodded firmly.

Her grip tightened around the massive greatsword—wider than a door plank. For the first ti, she felt a flicker of sothing new: hope.

ROAR!

The wyvern spewed a torrent of dragonfire against the walls.

The undead legions charged, heedless of their destruction, their bones piling up to form a macabre stairway for their king.

Golems drew back their colossal bows, loosing arrows the size of battering rams.

The siege had begun.

You are reading Who Designed This Dungeon Chapter 98 - 98 on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

The Extra's Survival cover
Same genre

The Extra's Survival

Mohitkumar ·Action

OnmywaytothejobinterviewunfortunatelyImetanaccident. Insteadofdying,Ifoundmyselfwakingupinthenovel'Dawnoflegend'whichIreadbeforedying. Iwakeupinthe...

Too Stubborn to Die cover
Same genre

Too Stubborn to Die

B.F.Huups ·Action

MultiversalRecordforFastestTutorialDeath:AaronDober,0d0h0m0.02sWhentheApocalypsecame,Aaronwasskydiving,andunfortunatelyforhim,hisTutorialwasrunbyab...

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.