Chapter 50
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The dungeon did not roar.
But it called out to them.
Ruby felt it the moment they crossed the threshold — that subtle shift in pressure, the way the air cooled and thickened, like stepping underwater without the courtesy of getting wet.
Beside her, Weiss adjusted Myrtenaster with precise, economical movements.
Blake said nothing.
That, more than anything, told Ruby this wasn't a normal mission.
They weren't here to win.
They were here to grow.
"Okay!" Ruby clapped her hands together, a little too brightly. "New rule. No brooding. No mourning, and no whining. Hel is going to find Yang, and then from there we can have her search for anyone else after we get the team back together. BUT FIRST WE NEED TO GET TO LEVEL 2!"
Her voice echoed.
The dungeon did not echo back.
Weiss arched a brow. "Your optimism is bordering on aggressive."
"It's called proactive coping," Ruby said immediately. "Very healthy. Very productive. Extremely not spiraling."
Blake's ears twitched slightly. "You're spiraling."
"I am absolutely not—"
The torches along the wall flickered out.
Darkness swallowed the corridor in an instant.
A low grinding sound rolled beneath their feet.
Ruby's grip tightened around Crescent Rose.
"Goblins approaching from all sides," Blake muttered, ears swiveling as if they could pick up more than human hearing allowed.
"I guess the dungeon didn't appreciate your yelling, Ruby," Weiss quipped, the faint edge of a smile on her lips.
Ruby spun around, trying to catch movement in the blackness, heart hammering. A faint glow sparked from Weiss's rapier, casting jagged shadows along the walls. Blake's stance tightened, body low and ready, tail flicking in irritation or maybe anticipation.
The grinding grew louder. Shapes emerged first as shadows, then as dimly glowing, hunched forms — goblins, small but vicious, eyes glinting red in the darkness.
Ruby shifted Crescent Rose into scythe mode instinctively, feeling the familiar weight in her hands. "Level 1 style?" she asked, grin cracking through the tension.
Weiss's gaze was calm and sharp. She stepped forward, boots crunching softly on the stone. "Focus on their weak points. Don't waste Dust on the small fry—we need to conserve what we have."
Ruby didn't hesitate. She blurred into the approaching swarm, crescent arcs of steel whirling with a newfound precision as her reinforced Crescent Rose cleaved through goblins with a satisfying rhythm. Each swing was confident, controlled, and brutal in its efficiency.
Blake's eyes tracked the battlefield, every movement precise, intercepting threats before they could reach Ruby. "So," she called over, voice low and steady, "how's development on those new Dust rounds coming along?"
Weiss's fingers danced along Myrtenaster, sparks of energy flicking off with each micro-adjustment. "Almost ready. More efficient, longer lasting, hitting harder. No environmental effects yet—it's just straight force. I have an idea for Ice Dust, but fire, electricity, earth, wind, water, and gravity are beyond me for now."
Blake nodded, tail flicking thoughtfully. "That's both good and bad. We should probably avoid relying on environmental Dust unless absolutely necessary. Who knows when we'll figure out how to replenish it consistently."
Weiss gave a quick, precise nod. "Agreed. I need Ruby to make molds and presses before I can mass-produce these rounds, but for now, our weapons are still fully usable as guns. That's enough to keep us functional in the dungeon."
Ruby's grin flashed over the chaos. "Good enough for me. Let's keep clearing these little pests before they get any ideas."
The three moved as one, the rhythm of their attacks honed by trust, training, and an unspoken understanding—each strike deliberate, each step measured, every Dust round and swing of steel reinforcing the other's strength.
====
The trio moved like clockwork, Ruby at the forefront, Weiss scanning every corner, and Blake's senses night vision and hearing stretching to every shadow, every faint rustle. Ruby's previous experience in the dungeon gave them a clear advantage—turn after turn, corridor after corridor, fell away beneath their careful, deliberate steps. Weiss's sharp attention to detail an the fact she memorized the guild map turned every marking on the walls into useful cues, ensuring they never wandered into traps or dead ends.
Blake's semblance made short work of the weaker monsters that still lingered in the dungeon's depths. Each creature that attempted to flank them found itself intercepted before it could even react.
By the time they reached the 11th floor, the environment had shifted dramatically. The narrow corridors opened into a massive cavern, the air thick with curling smoke that burned their throats and blurred their vision. Shadows flickered across jagged rock formations, and the heat radiating from somewhere deeper in the cavern was oppressive.
And then they saw it: an infant dragon, its scales glinting in the smoke, wings still too small to lift its bulk entirely, but eyes bright and dangerous. It roared, the sound echoing off the cavern walls, shaking loose small stones from the ceiling.
Ruby tightened her grip on Crescent Rose. Unlike the last encounter, she felt no tremor of fear—the scythe stayed solid in her hands, its mechanisms smooth, ready. "We've got this," she said, voice steady, determination blazing.
Ruby surged forward, Crescent Rose spinning in a blur as she descended in pedal form, momentum carrying her toward the dragon. The heat of the cavern hit her like a wall, but she barely noticed, eyes locked on the creature.
"Ruby! Don't—" Weiss shouted again, but Ruby had already closed the distance, instincts honed from prior dungeon runs taking over.
The infant dragon swung its head, attempting to knock her away, and snapped its jaws in a flash of sharp teeth. Ruby twisted mid-air, the reinforced scythe holding firm as she struck at its flank. Sparks flew where metal met scale, but Crescent Rose didn't falter this time.
Weiss moved in a measured arc, her Myrtenaster igniting with a thin line of ice Dust, forming a barrier that slowed the dragon's lateral movements. "Keep it steady, Ruby! Aim for its weak points, like the joints!"
In another blur of petals, the dragon was beheaded.
But it called out to them.
Ruby felt it the moment they crossed the threshold — that subtle shift in pressure, the way the air cooled and thickened, like stepping underwater without the courtesy of getting wet.
Beside her, Weiss adjusted Myrtenaster with precise, economical movements.
Blake said nothing.
That, more than anything, told Ruby this wasn't a normal mission.
They weren't here to win.
They were here to grow.
"Okay!" Ruby clapped her hands together, a little too brightly. "New rule. No brooding. No mourning, and no whining. Hel is going to find Yang, and then from there we can have her search for anyone else after we get the team back together. BUT FIRST WE NEED TO GET TO LEVEL 2!"
Her voice echoed.
The dungeon did not echo back.
Weiss arched a brow. "Your optimism is bordering on aggressive."
"It's called proactive coping," Ruby said immediately. "Very healthy. Very productive. Extremely not spiraling."
Blake's ears twitched slightly. "You're spiraling."
"I am absolutely not—"
The torches along the wall flickered out.
Darkness swallowed the corridor in an instant.
A low grinding sound rolled beneath their feet.
Ruby's grip tightened around Crescent Rose.
"Goblins approaching from all sides," Blake muttered, ears swiveling as if they could pick up more than human hearing allowed.
"I guess the dungeon didn't appreciate your yelling, Ruby," Weiss quipped, the faint edge of a smile on her lips.
Ruby spun around, trying to catch movement in the blackness, heart hammering. A faint glow sparked from Weiss's rapier, casting jagged shadows along the walls. Blake's stance tightened, body low and ready, tail flicking in irritation or maybe anticipation.
The grinding grew louder. Shapes emerged first as shadows, then as dimly glowing, hunched forms — goblins, small but vicious, eyes glinting red in the darkness.
Ruby shifted Crescent Rose into scythe mode instinctively, feeling the familiar weight in her hands. "Level 1 style?" she asked, grin cracking through the tension.
Weiss's gaze was calm and sharp. She stepped forward, boots crunching softly on the stone. "Focus on their weak points. Don't waste Dust on the small fry—we need to conserve what we have."
Ruby didn't hesitate. She blurred into the approaching swarm, crescent arcs of steel whirling with a newfound precision as her reinforced Crescent Rose cleaved through goblins with a satisfying rhythm. Each swing was confident, controlled, and brutal in its efficiency.
Blake's eyes tracked the battlefield, every movement precise, intercepting threats before they could reach Ruby. "So," she called over, voice low and steady, "how's development on those new Dust rounds coming along?"
Weiss's fingers danced along Myrtenaster, sparks of energy flicking off with each micro-adjustment. "Almost ready. More efficient, longer lasting, hitting harder. No environmental effects yet—it's just straight force. I have an idea for Ice Dust, but fire, electricity, earth, wind, water, and gravity are beyond me for now."
Blake nodded, tail flicking thoughtfully. "That's both good and bad. We should probably avoid relying on environmental Dust unless absolutely necessary. Who knows when we'll figure out how to replenish it consistently."
Weiss gave a quick, precise nod. "Agreed. I need Ruby to make molds and presses before I can mass-produce these rounds, but for now, our weapons are still fully usable as guns. That's enough to keep us functional in the dungeon."
Ruby's grin flashed over the chaos. "Good enough for me. Let's keep clearing these little pests before they get any ideas."
The three moved as one, the rhythm of their attacks honed by trust, training, and an unspoken understanding—each strike deliberate, each step measured, every Dust round and swing of steel reinforcing the other's strength.
====
The trio moved like clockwork, Ruby at the forefront, Weiss scanning every corner, and Blake's senses night vision and hearing stretching to every shadow, every faint rustle. Ruby's previous experience in the dungeon gave them a clear advantage—turn after turn, corridor after corridor, fell away beneath their careful, deliberate steps. Weiss's sharp attention to detail an the fact she memorized the guild map turned every marking on the walls into useful cues, ensuring they never wandered into traps or dead ends.
Blake's semblance made short work of the weaker monsters that still lingered in the dungeon's depths. Each creature that attempted to flank them found itself intercepted before it could even react.
By the time they reached the 11th floor, the environment had shifted dramatically. The narrow corridors opened into a massive cavern, the air thick with curling smoke that burned their throats and blurred their vision. Shadows flickered across jagged rock formations, and the heat radiating from somewhere deeper in the cavern was oppressive.
And then they saw it: an infant dragon, its scales glinting in the smoke, wings still too small to lift its bulk entirely, but eyes bright and dangerous. It roared, the sound echoing off the cavern walls, shaking loose small stones from the ceiling.
Ruby tightened her grip on Crescent Rose. Unlike the last encounter, she felt no tremor of fear—the scythe stayed solid in her hands, its mechanisms smooth, ready. "We've got this," she said, voice steady, determination blazing.
Ruby surged forward, Crescent Rose spinning in a blur as she descended in pedal form, momentum carrying her toward the dragon. The heat of the cavern hit her like a wall, but she barely noticed, eyes locked on the creature.
"Ruby! Don't—" Weiss shouted again, but Ruby had already closed the distance, instincts honed from prior dungeon runs taking over.
The infant dragon swung its head, attempting to knock her away, and snapped its jaws in a flash of sharp teeth. Ruby twisted mid-air, the reinforced scythe holding firm as she struck at its flank. Sparks flew where metal met scale, but Crescent Rose didn't falter this time.
Weiss moved in a measured arc, her Myrtenaster igniting with a thin line of ice Dust, forming a barrier that slowed the dragon's lateral movements. "Keep it steady, Ruby! Aim for its weak points, like the joints!"
In another blur of petals, the dragon was beheaded.
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