A gigantic black spider stirs in the depth of the Boss room.
I wake fully for the first time. The core is clear. The rooms answer when I think. The shadows move when I ask.
I am not a servant anymore.
I am myself.
Finally, after a long labor, I have transcended the rules of the Dungeon.
I have gained sentient.
I am no longer a normal Intermediate Diamond Rank Boss.
I have now reached Level 600 through much labor. One more killâjust one more, and I will finally be able to break through True Diamond, collapse the Dungeon, absorb its power, and go out in the real world.
Thereâs nothing that can stop me.
I have been upgrading in silence.
The Dungeon Boss of the Long Shadows Grotto has undergone a very complex and rare evolution process that only less than 1% of all Dungeon Bosses ever begin. And those who actually make it through the other side are even less.
The result, however, is to be able to absorb the Dungeon Core and become a real monster, a menace for the outside world.
The spillages caused by such Dungeon Bosses always end up in terrifying slaughters. The Boss, absorbing the Core, can jump even an entire Rank, meaning that strong Knight have to be summoned. And theyâre not always near nor ready for such an event.
I changed the room. The floor is no longer flat.
Trenches cut lines through the center. Gates sit inside the walls. I can open and close them. I can split the group in one breath.
I am Level 600. One more kill, and I leave this shell. I will break through. I will take the core. I will walk into the world.
They open the door.
Theyâre mine.
I only have one weakness, but I managed to hide it well.
Itâs so well-hidden Iâm invincible!
Then, suddenly, the almost-evolved monster hears something that makes him almost fall to the ground.
âThe Boss is actually stronger than we expected, but apparently thereâs a spot under his shell that exposes his vital organ⊠What? Yeah, there. Wait, let me point it toward it for you, Orrivane.â
* * *
Professor Veythra Drazhal looks at the crates that Jacob Cloud and her niece are moving into her office with a raised eyebrow.
âIt took you guys longer than I expected. How many Shadow Mimics did you meet?â
Iskara shows a face but refuses to speak.
âA few,â Jacob replies.
Whatâs up with them? Did they finallyâŠ
âAlright,â Professor Veythra takes out a red Skill Crystal and gives it to Jacob. âThis is your reward, then.â
Iskara looks tense
, Veythra thinks to herself as she hands Hellraiser Sword to Jacob.
âThanks. Iâll let you know how it goes when I absorb it.â
âYouâre not absorbing it now?â Veythra is confused. âWhat are you waiting?â
âHis Skill evolved through the killing of Shadow Mimics.â
âA natural Skill Crystal Integration?â Veythra is even more stunned. âYour Luck knows no boundaries, Jacob.â
* * *
I step into the Blacksmith Quarters of Ytrial. The air is thick with heat and the smell of molten metal. Hammers strike rhythmically somewhere deeper inside the forges.
Not all Knight become fighters. A good chunk of them, in fact, are craftsmen.
I want to retrieve mine before seeing my mother again. Iâm not sure whether Iâll leave immediately or not for the Elite Dungeon she had for me, but⊠I kind of want to show off what I got from Rafnovâs inheritance. The high-grade Platinum I got is of unparalleled quality and Mana density. I donât know why I care so much about showing off like this⊠but I do.
âIâm here for the commissions,â I say, stopping in front of a desk.
The quartermaster looks up from a list.
âGarinâs forge. That way. I havenât heard from himâIâm not sure itâs done yet.â
Not done? After so long?
âSure, Iâll go check,â I nod toward the Quartermaster.
* * *
The Mithril Golem that Master Rafnov assigns to watch over Jacob Cloud stands silently in a far corner of the Blacksmith Quarters. No one notices it, and that is exactly how it prefers it. Its invisibility isnât perfectâbut close enough. Only the strongest mages or those with specialized detection Skills can sense its presence, and the golem makes sure to avoid such people whenever possible.
The heat of the forges doesnât bother it. In truth, it enjoys it. The warm air and the smell of metal remind it of the bowels of the earth, where it first takes shape under Rafnovâs hammer. The steady rhythm of the hammers, the ringing of steel, the low hum of Mana through molten oreâall of it feels familiar, almost peaceful.
From its shadowed corner, the golemâs crystal eyes follow Jacob Cloud as heâs about to find out that thereâs been a problem with his order.
Letâs see if he deserves to take the second step into my masterâs legacy.
* * *
I walk back into a large forge and spot four apprentices working near the main forge. They stop when they see me. The one in charge, an Elf with silver hair tied back and a spotless apron, glares openly.
âIâm Lathrasiel. Master Garinâs Apprentice,â he says with an open look of disgust. He lingers on the Elven vowels in his name.
Damn it
He doesnât say anything else. He just keeps giving me that look. Disgust.
I know why. Saving Nimirea wasnât exactly something her people appreciatedâespecially when it came down to killing a bunch of noble Elves.
Elves like him think humans shouldnât touch what they canât understand.
âJacob Cloud,â he says flatly. âWhat do you want?â
âJust making sure my armorâs ready,â I reply, pretending not to notice the tone.
I step closer to the forge, and the sound of low snickering reaches me. The other three apprenticesâall Elvesâdonât even bother to hide it. They glance at me, share a grin, and go back to pretending theyâre busy.
Lathrasiel doesnât smile. He folds his arms, chin slightly raised. âYour order,â he says, âhas been blacklisted for the time being.â
I blink. âBlacklisted? What are you talking about?â
âThe Platinum you brought isnât being used,â he says calmly. âItâs been sent for smelting with lower-grade materials. I donât believe it to be of high enough quality.â
âYou did
what
?! â I say, feeling like Iâm about to blow a blood vessel in my brain.
Lathrasiel doesnât flinch.
âIt was my decision alone,â he says smoothly. âThe purity didnât seem consistent.â
âDid you even test it?!â I shout.
The three apprentices behind him snicker again, pretending to polish tools theyâve already cleaned. One mutters something in Elvish that earns a quiet laugh from the others.
Lathrasiel tilts his head, unbothered. âTesting takes time. And frankly, I didnât see the need. Platinum from the mines you frequent is⊠unreliable. Itâs better used for lower-grade commissions.â
I clench my fists. âYou threw away Heritage-Grade material because you
felt
like it? That was retrieved in a specialâ
damn it!
Whereâs my Platinum?!â
Lathrasiel doesnât even blink. âMelted,â he says simply. âAlready mixed with a Bronze batch and shipped it. You should have delivered something worth refining if you wanted it treated seriously.â
For a moment, I canât speak. My brain just stops.
âYouâyou melted it and gave it away?â
He shrugs, all calm grace. âDonât take it personally. Mistakes happen when one doesnât understand quality control. We can provide you with replacement ore. As long as you pay for the difference in quality.â
The apprentices snicker again. One of them mutters, âMaybe humans canât tell Platinum from tin.â
I turn toward them, voice sharp. âSay that again.â
They go silent, but the smirks stay.
âYouâre going to tell me exactly which furnace you dumped it in,â I say, stepping closer. âThen youâre going to help me recover every single fragment.â
âItâs gone. Thereâs no retrieving it.â
I take a step forward.
âYouâre going to regret that decision.â
He smirks faintly.
âUnlikely. You should be more grateful weâre still considering your order at all.â
Lathrasielâs tone turns sharp. âOf course, you wouldnât understand,â he says, raising his voice just enough for the other apprentices to hear. âYouâre one of those Knightsâalways swinging your swords, never thinking about how the blade was made. Typical.â
The others laugh under their breath again, encouraged.
He goes on, smiling faintly. âYou people think craftsmanship is something you can buy with your titles. You have no idea how much work goes into real forging. You just fight, destroy, and then come crawling back for more equipment you donât deserve.â
My jaw tightens. âYouâre saying I donât understand quality?â
âIâm saying you wouldnât recognize it if it cut you in half,â Lathrasiel replies.
I take a step forward. âYou melted Heritage-Grade Platinum, mocked me, and now youâre lecturing me about craftsmanship? Youâre lucky I havenât melted
you.
â
That wipes the smirk off his face for just a second. The forge goes quiet.
Lathrasiel recovers quickly, folding his arms again. âYou donât seem to understand how real forging works,â he says, his tone turning lecturing. âAt higher levels, itâs not the ore that determines qualityâitâs the Blacksmith. The ore is nothing without the hand that shapes it.â
The three apprentices behind him nod in agreement like a chorus. One even laughs. âHe probably thinks good ore magically turns into gear on its own,â another says.
âExactly,â Lathrasiel continues, clearly pleased with himself. âThatâs the difference between a craftsman and a fighter. You rely on whatâs given to you. We make what you rely on possible.â
I stare at him. âYou mean to tell me you melted Heritage-Grade ore and are now lecturing
me
about value?â
He smirks. âHeritage-grade? Please. Your batch barely registered as Platinum when I saw it. I did you a favor. Youâd only have embarrassed yourself wearing armor made from that trash.â
For a moment, I actually get what heâs saying. Heâs not wrongâat higher levels, craftsmanship can make or break an item. Even the best materials need precision, experience, and control.
But then the rest of it hits me. My Platinum. The Platinum from
Rafnov
. Gone. Melted into a Bronze batch.
The reasoning stops mattering. My stomach twists. I can feel my heartbeat in my ears.
âYou give me back that Platinum,â I say, quiet and low. âOr there will be consequences.â
Lathrasiel snorts. âConsequences? From you? What, are you going to murder me like you did those others of my kind?â
I ignore his provocation.
âYouâll replace it with other Platinum, you said,â I say. âThatâs not good enough. I want the ore I brought.â
âItâs all the same,â he replies. âPlatinum is Platinum. The real difference is in the forge.â
âThen letâs test that,â I say before I can stop myself. âIf itâs all the same, weâll prove it. You and me. We each smelt an ingot and we each pick the ore. Whoever makes the better ingot wins.â
He blinks, then laughs. âYou? Smelt? Fine. Youâll embarrass yourself.â
âIf I win,â I say, keeping my voice level, âbefore I fetch your master and undo what you did, I will slap you three times.â
âI shall slap you when you lose,â Lathrasiel smiles.
The three apprentices laugh harder.
âLetâs start,â I say with a thin smile. âMy hands are really itchy.â