Chapter 3: Elites and Newbies
The kobolds came out screaming.
Twenty-three of them, packed into the corridor with the chaotic energy of creatures that had been shoved into a confined space and pointed at warm bodies. The goblins behind them were already tripping over each other, rusted blades catching the torchlight as they scrambled forward.
The six newbies made a sound that was not quite a scream and not quite a word.
The four didn’t make any sound at all.
The dual wielder moved first, both blades clearing their sheaths in the same motion, and he hit the front line of kobolds before they had fully registered he was coming. Two dropped in the first second. Three more in the next. He moved through them with the clean economy of someone who had done this enough times that it had stopped being exciting and become simply a thing that needed doing.
The tank planted himself between the newbies and the rear flank of goblins, shield up, and the first three that hit him bounced off like they had run into a wall that had decided to become annoyed. He didn’t even shift his feet.
The assassin was already gone. Kael tracked her as she slipped into the shadow of the wall and simply ceased to be visible, and then kobolds started dropping at the edges of the fight from wounds that appeared without any clear source, quick and precise, nothing wasted.
Violet watched all of it with her hands folded behind her back, head tilted slightly, and then raised one finger and a beam of purple light snapped out and took a goblin clean off its feet from across the corridor.
"Seven," she said to herself.
Kael observed all of this with great satisfaction.
These four are actually good, he thought. Which makes the other six infinitely more entertaining.
He turned his attention to the newbies.
They were fighting. Technically. The word fighting was doing considerable work in that sentence. One of them had stabbed a kobold and then looked so disturbed by the result that he had stopped moving entirely and was just standing there holding his sword out at arm’s length while the kobold slid off it. Another was swinging at a goblin with the energy of someone trying to beat a rug clean, connecting occasionally but with no particular strategy behind any of it. A third had taken a shallow cut across the forearm from a rusted blade and was making significantly more noise about it than the wound warranted.
A fourth tripped.
Incredible, Kael thought.
He felt a deep and genuine delight building somewhere in the core of whatever counted as his chest. He reached into the walls, found another cluster of kobolds he had been holding in reserve, and opened a second passage.
Twelve more poured out.
The noise the newbies made at that moment was something Kael decided he would remember fondly.
"More on the left!" the dual wielder shouted, pivoting immediately. The four adjusted without any apparent stress, expanding their coverage, the tank drifting left to cut off the new angle while the dual wielder tightened his range and the assassin rematerialised briefly from the shadows to take three of them down before vanishing again.
Violet raised two fingers this time.
The corridor lit purple for a moment.
Six kobolds stopped moving.
"Nine," she said, updating her count.
The newbies were running on fumes and adrenaline now, the shallow injuries and the weight of sustained panic doing what actual damage hadn’t fully managed. Their movements were getting slower, their breathing louder, and one of them had developed the wide fixed stare of someone whose body had decided it was done for the evening regardless of what their brain wanted.
The dual wielder assessed the situation in about one second. "We go deeper. Now."
"They need rest," the assassin said, appearing at his shoulder.
"They can rest on deeper. There’s a clear chamber past the second turn. We stay here any longer and they become a liability." He looked at the newbies. "Move. All of you. Now."
They moved.
Kael let them go. He pulled the remaining monsters back, closing the passages behind them, and watched the party push through to the stairwell and down. He was in a generous mood. They had earned the breather.
The clear chamber on Floor one was exactly where the dual wielder said it was, a wide natural hollow in the stone where the ceiling lifted and the air moved and the darkness felt less aggressive than the corridors around it. The party collapsed into it with varying degrees of dignity. The four found positions against the walls with the practiced ease of people who had done this before. The six newbies simply dropped where they stopped walking.
The tank looked at them.
Then he started laughing.
It came from somewhere deep, a full and unhurried laugh that rolled around the stone chamber without any apology behind it. He pointed at no one in particular.
"Hahahahahah, I told you," he said. "I told every single one of you."
No one argued. No one had the energy.
One of the newbies was lying flat on his back, staring at the ceiling like it had personally wronged him. Another was pressing a strip of torn cloth to the cut on her arm with the quiet expression of someone reassessing several recent decisions simultaneously.
The dual wielder sat with his back against the wall, blades across his knees, and stared at the floor.
"Those monsters," he said after a moment. The laughter from the tank had faded and the chamber had gone quiet. "The weapons they were carrying." He turned one of his own blades over slowly. "Floor One monsters don’t carry weapons. They never carry weapons."
Nobody answered him.
The silence that followed was the kind that meant everyone had heard it and nobody wanted to say out loud what it implied. ƒrēewebnoѵёl.cσm
Then a section of the wall across the chamber moved. freewёbnoνel.com
A door opened where no door had been.