Chapter 239: White Cave
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[Note: User restrictions have now been lifted]
[Note: User status will now return to normal]
[Note: Due to recent exposure to temporal mind haze, taking rest is advised before-]
I dismissed the system's notification, rising to my feet and rolling my right shoulder as I adjusted to the surge of mana returning to my body.
My chest pulsed with a subtle ache-still healing, though the worst of the wound had closed
over.
My muscles resisted, adjusting to the strain of mana coursing through them, and I felt a slight restriction in my range of movement.
Not ideal, but my arm still held steady enough to grip a sword.
Expanding my mana sense outward, I scanned the surroundings.
'Empty.'
This vast cavern stretched even farther than it appeared at a glance, layers upon layers of depth hinted at by the echo of my mana.
It was oddly silent, and although I appreciated the lack of an immediate threat, it felt like a temporary reprieve in a dungeon like this.
My gaze turned to the two pathways ahead-left and right.
Both stretched into dark, similar tunnels, making it hard to tell which, if any, led to a safer route or the heart of the dungeon.
There was no mana signature in either direction, no indication of one path being less hazardous than the other.
I'd have to choose quickly, but if I took the wrong path and encountered something formidable while still partially wounded, it could complicate things further.
Considering my terrible luck, it almost felt like fate had it out for me, no matter which path I picked. Left, right—one would surely lead to some form of misery.
Might as well trust my instincts, right?
I glanced around, hoping for some hint, some spark of direction.
In a normal setting, I'd follow the light, head toward some flicker of hope, but in this place, the light seemed to bounce of every ounce of space, leaving both paths equally shrouded in uncertainty.
All that stretched ahead were rough, dim corridors with no hints of life, no visible signs of any safer route.
A faint chuckle escaped me as I weighed my options.
Usually, it's the right path that gets favored in stories-the one they tell you to follow because it's the "right" choice.
So, out of sheer logic, I picked the left.
-----
"...Knights... Loss... Unforeseen..."
In the deepest layer of the dungeon's white cavern, the White Bishop stood motionless, its singular, unblinking eye fixed on the chessboard before it.
The dim light cast long shadows across the board, each piece representing a pawn in the complex game that was unraveling beyond its control.
Its four hands twitched, their spindly joints dislocating and trembling at the sheer anomaly of what had transpired.
"...Anomaly... Eliminated...???"
How could this be?
The threats within the dungeon were formidable, yes, but nothing it hadn't accounted for.
Yet, three of its most trusted knights had fallen in mere minutes.
It was unfathomable.
These knights were crafted to withstand all but the most severe of onslaughts, entrusted with defending the Queen's will with unwavering loyalty and resilience.
"Information... Intercepted..."
The White Bishop tightened its grip on the edge of the board.
Being the mind tether of the dungeon, it could connect to every knight under its jurisdiction, sensing, receiving, and relaying their experiences in real time. But this time, nothing had returned.
The knights had been expertly trained in data retrieval, capable of conveying critical information even under the heaviest of restrictions.
Yet there was nothing. It was as though the knights' knowledge had been erased at the moment of defeat, as if a seal had been placed on their very consciousness the moment, they were taken out....
Could there truly be something-or someone-within this anomaly capable of challenging their majesty's authority?
The thought clawed its way into the White Bishop's mind, an impossible concept becoming disturbingly plausible.
Only beings with power rivaling the Queen could create such interference.
Its mind churned, running calculations, analyzing every possibility as it struggled to fathom the implications of such an adversary.
Alarms blared through the White Bishop's mind, each warning flashing like a strobe of white- hot light in its vision.
"...Information... Gather... Abandon..."
Study was now secondary.
Elimination took precedence.
Its gaze shifted toward the meticulously crafted white cage, prepared to teleport any
captured anomaly directly into its depths.
Yet, despite the activation of the [White Whistle] arrow, not a single target had appeared
within its confines.
This meant the anomaly possessed power potent enough to interfere with the Queen's divine blessing an ability bordering on blasphemous.
Their original mission was already delayed long enough...
The White Bishop straightened; its four arms momentarily stilled before each conjured a
weapon into existence.
A wand. A sword. A spear. And an axe.
Each weapon shimmered with a blinding light, floating ominously beside it, ready to be deployed at a moment's notice.
The bishop's single eye drifted down to the chessboard, its fingers hovering over the stark, gleaming dots scattered across the board. With a single snap, the board's magic surged.
In a flash of white energy, two knight constructs materialized alongside two massive golems, each bearing a head shaped like a rook's towering crenellations.
The air crackled with a silent tension as the White Bishop issued its decree.
"Mission... Compromised... Threat... Elimination... Priority... Army... Gather..."
It pointed one skeletal finger to a crisscrossed section of the board where three bright red dots pulsed ominously, signaling the anomaly's current location, the only piece of information his knight's managed to send before perishing.
The message was clear, every force, every knight, every ounce of energy was to converge. The order was as absolute as the unyielding white walls of the dungeon.
This was no longer an investigation.
Tears gathered in her eyes, welling up despite her attempts to blink them away, unbidden and
uncontrollable.
She chastised herself for being this vulnerable, for letting her emotions spill over in such a
perilous place.
Why now, of all times, was she reacting this way? Her mind spiraled, searching for answers,
but all she found was a hollow emptiness and a deep-seated worry that gnawed at her with
every step.
'Riley... please be safe...'
For the first time in her life, Janica found herself on the verge of begging-to the goddess.
-----
"Principal, you're here!"
RUMBLE-! RUMBLE-!
BOOM!
A bolt of lightning struck down, illuminating the dimly lit library, and a flock of crows, their
feathers charged with dark, purplish lightning, materialized midair, swirling together before condensing into the form of a beautiful woman.
Her long, jet-black hair fell like silk, and purple lightning flickered along her eyes, sharp and
intense as they scanned the room.
"What's the situation?" she demanded, her tone crisp and efficient. Her gaze swept across the space, assessing the dense mana in the air.
She let out a subtle sigh of relief when she felt no fractures in the inter-dimensional fabric; the dungeon hadn't broken through-yet.
Amelia, who was standing beside the shimmering, ominous portal, tensed.
She'd rarely seen her grandmother like this-so focused, her mana coiled and ready like a
blade drawn halfway from its sheath.
It was a sight few ever witnessed, and the intensity of it made Amelia's hands clench
involuntarily. Clearing her throat, she raised a slightly trembling hand, gesturing toward the gate behind
her.
"As you can see..." she said, attempting a steady tone. A large, looming white portal pulsed at
the far end corner of the library, emanating such dense, compact energy that it seemed to warp the very air around it.
How it had remained hidden within the academy was a mystery to them all.
Principal Leilah's purple eyes narrowed as she studied the portal in silence.
Her gaze traced the edges of the dungeon gate, lingering over the peculiar runes etched along
its edges.
At least there were no apparent disturbances within the dungeon itself-small mercies, she
supposed.
"You mentioned that students found this dungeon... Where are they?" Amelia flinched, adjusting her glasses with a nervous sigh as she avoided her grandmother's
piercing stare. She felt the glances of nearby academy staff, all just as wary of the principal's presence. But there was no way to skirt around the truth.
"According to witness reports... they went in...?" she admitted, her voice barely a whisper.
"What!?"
As worry gripped her mind, spiraling through all the worst-case scenarios, she realized, with
a sickening twist in her gut, that the worst had actually come to pass.
"Damn it all!"
Leilah clenched her fists, the weight of frustration only intensifying.
She was still in the thick of dealing with the academy's public image, swamped with papers,
meetings, and apologies to various leaders, all in an attempt to repair the academy's reputation after the recent scandals.
And now, yet another crisis was emerging, one she couldn't ignore.
She hadn't rushed here from her meeting with the head of the Eastern Empire only to face
another failure.
Taking a deep breath, she wasted no more time, barking her orders with a tone that brooked
no argument.
"Dean Gale, Professor Ferdinand-come with me!"
Without waiting, Leilah strode toward the dungeon gate, her determined footsteps echoing with urgency.
"Principal, wait!" Amelia called after her, her warning lost in the rush of tension. Just as Leilah neared the threshold, a blast of white mana exploded from the gate, slamming
her backward with a force so raw and untamed that even she, one of the academy's strongest mages, had to brace herself, sliding back a few paces. "What...?" She blinked in shock, staring at the pulsing white portal. The dungeon gate stood open, yet something prevented her from entering. It was as if an
invisible barrier, sealed from within, blocked her way.
"It's... closed?"
The realization settled over her, and her concern deepened. If the dungeon was somehow
locked from the inside, the danger the students were in was even greater than she'd first
feared.
Her mind raced with possibilities, each more troubling than the last.
....
"Hmm- looks like we can't enter in the front Alice~"
As Cheshire hovered invisibly, observing the scene in the library with quiet intrigue, his
playful demeanor softened.
"Did the White Queen notice your fondness for him perhaps~?"
A hint of unease replaced his usual mischief as he waited for any word from his master.
Beside him, Alice floated silently, her body emitting a fierce, crimson aura that pulsed and
flickered with her rising emotions.
Her golden eyes, typically serene, had shifted, deepening to a dangerous red as anger and
worry clouded her expression.
"Junior..." she murmured, her voice tight with urgency and frustration.