Chapter 100: Bonus

Name:Curselock Author:
Chapter 100: Bonus

With the dungeon more or less completed, there really wasn’t much left for the boys to do. They had returned Gelo to her mother, gained plenty of experience, and even some items. Jude and Glenny got the most out of their troubles, each ranking up their Legacy abilities several times, while Jude also received a blessing and great advice. Leland, on the other hand, remained where he was with his progression, Soul Fire still blocking his advancement into rank two.

Soul Fire had been weighing on his mind since he unlocked the ability, mainly because it required human souls to activate. It took him a bit to realize it, but if he wanted to keep up with Jude and Glenny, he’d have to not only kill monsters. Ranking up the curse was going to be a problem, one that he wasn’t quite sure of the upper limits.

Now more than ever, he felt inclined to hide his Legacy from others. If people knew he required souls to rank up, surely there’d be a bounty on his head. That sort of thing was left for the vile Lords and their Legacies.

But then again, the Lords Leland had talked to didn’t mind his presence. Not like they would with a vile Legacy. There had been crusades to sunder the vile Lords’ forces before, all of which were started by one or more good-aligned Lords. But that was many, many years ago and Leland didn’t know all of the specifics.

No, the Lords he’d talked to all referred to him as the Calamity, son of the Calamity, or child of the Calamity. Which, while he still didn’t know what it meant, obviously related to Soul Fire.

Type: Curse

Rank: 1 (S)

Ignite a lost soul.

Soul Fire’s strength directly correlates to the strength of the soul used.

You are the Calamity.

He reviewed the curse, finding the page of his grimoire unchanged since the last time he looked. There wasn’t much he could do right now, not with so much uncertainty. A battle was expected the moment they stepped out of the dungeon, and hopefully that would add two new souls to his collection.

Leland paused at the thought before reeling in guilt. Regardless of whether people attacked him or his friends, being thankful that he could collect their souls was a dark idea. Magic and power was a slippery slope, as was the hunger to progress in his ways.

He’d have to be more careful with how he approached Soul Fire. He couldn’t let himself get used to killing. He’d quit being an adventurer if that was the case.

“Before you all leave, take whatever you want,” Floe said, pulling Leland out of his internal musing. The massive bear gestured with her snout at the treasures of her den.

“We can’t—”

“Sure you can.”

“But the—”

“We have literally no use for any of this... stuff. And if we did, I could kill whatever drops said item over and over until we have a replacement,” Floe said.

At least now he’d have some shade if nothing else.

Of course they each took jewelry trinkets, but those were easily kept in their bags until they were properly appraised.

And with everything set, the boys, Floe, and Gelo exited the den and slowly walked toward where Floe had killed her husband not a day earlier. A glowing green-blue swirl marked the kill sight, a dungeon portal back to the entrance of the snow fields. They each walked through it, arriving at the barren white landscape.

“I guess this is goodbye,” Leland said to the two bears.

Floe gave a long nod, but Gelo burst into tears. “Don’t go!! Please don’t go!” she catapulted herself into Jude’s knees, almost knocking him over. Jude stood strong, however, despite the tears forming in his own eyes. He petted her and hummed the tune that caused them to meet in the first place.

Before they had left, the topic of taking Gelo with the boys had been brought up by Floe. It was obvious the cub was not happy with her current home life and wished to see the outside world. Before they could even discuss, Gelo put her foot down.

“I’m not ready,” she said simply. “I-I was impatient and almost died. Without Jude and the others I would have.”

“Indeed, child,” Floe said with a gentle smile. “I will teach you properly this time. No naps, no disparaging slumbers. When you leave home next time, it will be the last time.”

“Mother...?”

“I am a dungeon’s creation, I must remain near the core. You, however, are not, and can go anywhere you see fit. When it is time, you will leave here and never return. Not to this prison.”

Again, Gelo cried herself to sleep in her mother’s clutches. Their private conversations had warmed the two ice bears, and now they were inseparable. Mother and daughter, as it should be.

“Jude,” Floe had said once she was sure Gelo was asleep. “If something happens to me, and I am reset, I—”

“We will take her in,” Jude interrupted. “But that’s not going to happen, right?”

Floe gave a soft smile. “I will not. Not until I deem myself ready to leave this loop and destroy this dungeon once and for all. Not until she is ready to live on her own. Thank you three for being her first friends.”

The boys each wiped a tear from their eyes, just like they did currently in front of the dungeon’s exit.

“Come find me when you are ready,” Jude whispered to Gelo.

She nodded and backpedaled to her mother’s side. One by one the boys stepped through the dungeon exit, back into the glowing mushroom lit cavern.

They had adopted battle stances instantly, but they were only met with empty silence. “Huh, I guess they didn’t want to fight us,” Leland said.