Chapter 41: Quaming earth
The more they talked about their experiences in the wasteland, the more Yuto became convinced that the realm possessed a malicious sort of creativity.
Not merely hostility.
Hostility would have been easier to understand.
Everything they had encountered since arriving had been dangerous, that much was obvious. The creatures wanted to kill them, the environment seemed determined to mislead them, and even the terrain itself often felt designed to punish mistakes. Yet there was something more deliberate at work beneath all of it, something that transformed ordinary danger into something far more irritating.
It was as though whoever had created this realm had sat down and carefully considered the most frustrating possible ways to threaten people.
The place seemed to enjoy trickery.
It enjoyed disguises.
It enjoyed taking something familiar and twisting it into a threat.
"For example," Maya said as they sat near the mouth of the cave, watching the endless darkness beyond, "we were being chased by a steel-plated beetle."
The image immediately sounded unpleasant.
Yuto motioned for her to continue.
"Tami and I needed to get out of the open," she said. "There was a rock nearby. Large enough to hide behind while the beetle passed."
Yuto already had a bad feeling about where the story was heading.
"Let me guess."
Maya glanced at him.
"It wasn’t a rock."
She said it so calmly that for a second he almost missed the implication.
"It wasn’t a rock?" he repeated.
"It was a mass of small reptiles."
Yuto blinked.
"A what?"
"A mass of small reptiles," Maya repeated. "Dozens of them. Maybe hundreds. They were packed together so tightly they looked like a single stone formation."
Yuto stared at her.
For several seconds he genuinely wasn’t sure whether she was joking.
Her expression suggested she wasn’t.
"They looked exactly like a rock," she continued. "The same color. The same shape. We didn’t realize anything was wrong until we were already crouched behind them."
The image assembled itself inside Yuto’s imagination with disturbing clarity.
A giant armored beetle charging across the wasteland.
Two desperate people scrambling for cover.
A conveniently placed rock.
A rock that wasn’t actually a rock.
Just a massive pile of reptiles apparently committed to a very convincing geological impersonation.
"And then?" he asked.
"They came alive."
Again, she delivered the statement with the emotional weight of someone commenting on changing weather conditions.
"They started moving all at once. The entire thing unfolded beneath us."
Yuto winced.
"We almost went under before we understood what was happening."
The mental image somehow became worse.
He imagined hundreds of tiny scaled bodies suddenly shifting beneath someone’s feet like living quicksand.
"How did you get out?"
"Tami’s panther."
A faint smile touched Maya’s face.
"We climbed onto its back. It carried us away before the reptiles could surround us."
"And the beetle?"
"The beetle almost heard the commotion."
She brushed a strand of dark hair behind her ear.
"It turned toward us. We were already moving by then."
Yuto slowly nodded.
"Right."
For a while he fell silent.
The wasteland was becoming increasingly difficult to categorize.
Every time he thought he had begun understanding the rules of this realm, something happened that made him feel completely ignorant again.
Giant clicking swarms.
Invisible predators.
Living rocks.
At this point he wouldn’t have been surprised if the sky itself eventually tried to eat somebody.
After a few moments he glanced toward Maya.
The violet light filtering into the cave illuminated one side of her face while leaving the other partially shadowed.
"I honestly didn’t expect to see you here," he admitted.
Maya looked at him.
"Here?"
"Anywhere inside the First Tower."
He gestured vaguely toward the wasteland beyond.
"This isn’t exactly the sort of place people wander into by accident."
"I didn’t have much choice."
The response came quietly.
Simple.
Brief.
Yet something in her tone suggested there was far more behind those words than she intended to share.
Yuto waited.
The silence stretched.
He could practically feel the unfinished story sitting behind her answer.
There was always more whenever somebody spoke like that.
Always history.
Always circumstances.
Always pain.
Yet Maya had a habit of revealing only the exact amount she wished to reveal and absolutely nothing beyond that.
Trying to pull information from her felt like trying to open a door that only moved from the inside.
Eventually Yuto accepted defeat.
If she wanted to elaborate, she would.
If she didn’t, no amount of waiting would change her mind.
Before he could continue, Maya spoke first.
"Why are you here?"
Yuto leaned back slightly.
"Similar situation."
Maya watched him patiently.
"I was in serious trouble," he said. "Ran out of options. The tower happened to be the only exit available."
For a moment she seemed thoughtful.
Then she nodded.
"We’re surprisingly similar."
Yuto laughed softly.
"Similar backstories."
His smile widened slightly.
"That’s about where it ends."
The words left his mouth before his brain properly reviewed them.
Maya tilted her head.
"What does that mean?"
Immediately, Yuto regretted speaking.
Because unfortunately his brain had been referring to a very specific difference.
Namely that Maya was considerably more attractive than he was.
A fact that felt both obvious and impossible to explain without sounding ridiculous.
His thoughts crashed into one another.
Several possible responses appeared.
Every single one seemed disastrous.
"I just meant..."
Maya continued looking at him.
Waiting.
Patiently.
"Nothing," Yuto said quickly.
"Forget it."
He stood up with considerably more urgency than the situation required.
The movement felt suspicious even to him.
"I’m going to sleep."
He pointed toward the interior of the cave.
"The cave."
Smooth.
Very smooth.
"I’ll come," Maya said as she rose to her feet.
Which immediately made the situation worse.
Together they headed deeper into the cave.
The tunnel connecting the entrance to the larger chamber was narrow, forcing them to walk side by side through a confined corridor of dark stone. Shadows crowded the walls around them while faint echoes followed each step.
Yuto kept his gaze fixed forward. fгeewёbnoѵel.cσm
This should not have been difficult.
Yet somehow it was.
The tunnel genuinely wasn’t designed for multiple people moving comfortably through it. The space was limited enough that their shoulders occasionally brushed together as they walked.
Every accidental contact immediately registered in his awareness.
A beautiful girl was walking directly beside him through a dark tunnel. frёeωebɳovel.com
He was painfully aware of this fact.
Unfortunately, attempting not to think about it only ensured that he thought about it more.
The darkness didn’t help.
The closeness didn’t help.
The silence definitely didn’t help.
Determined to distract himself, he forced his thoughts elsewhere.
The Blackmaw.
The beetle.
The living rock reptiles.
Anything.
Literally anything.
Thankfully, the tunnel eventually widened.
The larger cave chamber opened before them, providing blessed breathing room.
Tami was already asleep near the far wall.
The panther rested beside him, somehow folded into a shape that looked physically impossible for an animal of its size. Its enormous body was curled tightly around itself, appearing far smaller than it had any right to.
The sight eased some of the lingering tension in Yuto’s chest.
He exhaled slowly.
Then the ground began to quake.
Not settled.
Not shifted.
Moved.
Violently.
The entire cave lurched beneath them with sudden force.
Loose stones jumped across the floor as a deep tremor rolled through the earth, powerful enough to shake dust from the ceiling and send pebbles skittering in every direction.