3.12 – Split

Name:Dungeons and Dalliances Author:
3.12 – Split

Of course, the universe didn’t cut Natalie a break.

“Sixteen monster cores,” Ana said. “Natalie collected eight, Sofia six, and Jordan two. Sixteen total. Then there’s the ring, the gloves, the cloak, the ore, the herbs, and the bag of coins.”

“Bag of coins?” Jordan asked.

“Elizabeth found it,” Ana said.

“And the cloak?” Natalie asked. Clearly, in her misadventure with the vines, she’d missed a few discoveries.

“Reduces the chances of a monster focusing on you,” Jordan said. “Probably something for me or Liz.”

The two squishiest—rogue and healer. Though Ana was probably in contention, too. Sofia, though physically weaker than most fighters, still could hold up better than a rogue or healer. She was the second most durable in the group, though by a large margin to Natalie.

“Didn’t have time to talk about it in the rush,” Jordan added. “And what kind of coins?”

“Found them beneath a ridge,” Liz said. “Silver, about thirty of them, it’ll sell real well. Honestly, though, I’m surprised we didn’t find more. That last room was pretty big.”

“We didn’t have time to properly search it,” Ana said. She glanced Natalie’s way, unconsciously, though not accusatorily, putting the blame on her. Which was fair. Natalie’s debacle had cut off the rest of the team’s search efforts as they scrambled to help her. “Regardless,” she continued, “how are we handling the split? Equal cores, then have the rest appraised? For that matter, how are the raw resources working?”

Natalie supposed it was time to get this out of the way. She rummaged around in her pouch as Ana talked. A moment later, she said, “Eight? I’ve only got seven cores.”

The group looked at her, and Natalie’s skin crawled. She didn’t consider herself a poor liar, but that didn’t mean she liked doing it. Especially to her team. These were about the only circumstances she could imagine being forced into it. It wasn’t, obviously, greed guiding her, but a need for secrecy. She simply wouldn’t be able to explain away a monster core stuffed with infertility potion.

“You collected eight,” Ana said. “I’m certain.”

And wasn’t that unfortunate? Ana’s apparently impressive memory, and scrutinizing attention to detail, was an invaluable trait down in the dungeon, but in this case? Highly inconvenient.

“Only got seven,” Natalie said, frowning as she made a show of rummaging around and tapping her hand against her other pouches, feeling for more. “Look.” She held out the orbs. The hidden core tucked into her boot burned against her ankle.

Ana frowned at her.ViiSiit novelbi/n(.)c/(o)m for latest novels

Liz, in return, frowned at Ana. “It’s not like she’d lie. It’s one core.”

“If everyone’s fine with that.” It’d been what they agreed, but there hadn’t been a particular focus on how to handle loot. As Liz had said, early earnings, especially a first-time exploratory delve, simply weren’t that important. And there was a standard “default”, so to say.

Fifty-fifty with resource gathering meant that half of the resources gathered went to the team, and half of it stayed with the gatherer. It was a way to equalize the earnings of the gatherers, since the team had to fight to get them to resource-rich locations, but at the same time, a person who focused on getting a harvesting skill to a high level deserved a more lucrative cut compared to those who didn’t. How that was handled varied by team, but fifty-fifty was what people generally went by.

The group looked at each other, and after a collection of nods and shrugs, it was decided. They would handle splits and who got what item tomorrow.

Shortly, they headed to their respective barracks. Jordan trailed after her, even though hers was in a different direction. Sofia and Liz—being in Natalie’s barracks—they let go ahead.

When they were safe from being overheard, Jordan asked, “So. What was that?”

Natalie grimaced.

“You hid a core,” Jordan guessed.

“I ...”

“I’m sure you had a reason.”

Like usual, no judgment. It wasn’t a surprise, and it was returned one-hundred-percent, but it still made Natalie’s heart skip a beat. She almost blushed at the total display of trust.

“Yeah. Explain later? It’s a story.”

“Guessing it has to do with your class.”

“Good guess.”

Jordan gave her a sympathetic look. “I’m curious, but yeah. Better saved for later. Maybe we’ll get put together for kitchen duty tomorrow.”

“We can hope.”

“See you then, then.” She smiled, and Natalie’s heart skipped a second beat. “Good delve, by the way. We’ll be in the big leagues in no time.”

Natalie smiled back, then returned the wave as Jordan split away, headed for her own barracks.