Font Size
15px

2.08 – Class

“However,” Instructor Lauer monotoned, “that’s far from saying preparation and study is useless to a first-ti delver. No two runs are the sa, but certain fraworks can be applied to aid the neophyte in a successful dungeon run.”

Natalie hadn’t thought it possible, but Instructor Lauer was making delving sound boring. The dungeon was the most incredible phenona on the planet, a labyrinth of infinite complexity and variance, a structure described as sentient by so scholars, and allegedly sprawled beneath the entire world. The riches pulled from its depths fueled half of society as they knew it. There were beasts hidden in the deeper floors that could destroy cities if they sohow surfaced. And Instructor Lauer?

He was making it boring.

Natalie’s head slowly declined toward her desk, eyes fluttering as her desperate efforts to stay awake faltered. The world went fuzzy, then—

Then Jordan kicked her ankle, and Natalie jerked up, blinking in disorientation. Jordan studiously wrote in her notebook, not even glancing over, her passive waking-up of Natalie so ingrained she might not have realized she’d done it. Jordan was the only reason Natalie hadn’t failed a grade, back at Tinford. Not because Natalie was stupid, but because she seriously couldn’t keep still. Classrooms were torture to her. And three hours a day? Less than high school, but still the worst thing Natalie could imagine.

“For example,” the buzzing, impossible-to-focus on noise continued, “the study of monsters. While your dungeoneering course will be concerned with the intricacies of traps, floor layouts, and common encounters, we will focus on the dungeon’s inhabitants, first and foremost. Much can be ascertained from a monster’s appearance, and a formal [Inspect], even more so.”

It wasn’t that the material was boring. Just, everyone knew this. As in, everyone everyone. They were truly starting from the ground up when it ca to the dungeon—not taking any material for granted, not even stuff six year olds would know. Which Natalie supposed was fair, because as Harper had pointed out during orientation, so students joined Tenet from even stranger circumstances than Natalie. There were lots of myths to dispel, or holes to fill, just to be safe. But that didn’t make it not torture.

“But let’s start with general classifications, first. Consider—“

A bell went off in the distance, interrupting Instructor Lauer’s monologue. He cut off mid-sentence, and once the echoing noise silenced, said, “It seems we’ve run out of ti for the day. Your next instructor will be in shortly. Rember, pages sixteen through twenty nine, by tomorrow.”

The enormous lecture hall ca to life with chairs scraping against the ground. Natalie’s next class was in this sa hall—as many of the students’ was—so she stayed seated.

She groaned and thumped her head onto the desk. “I’m not gonna make it, Jay.”

Jordan patted her back sympathetically. “There, there. Just two more classes.”

“Every day,” Natalie groaned.

“It is pretty boring,” Liz piped in. “I an, how’s he even do it? No inflections, just one long string of blah, blah, blah.”

Liz had, it seed, inserted herself into Natalie’s group. Natalie had no clue why. Not that she minded. Just, a literal, actual princess, making friends with the three of them? Why?

To the right of Jordan, Sofia leaned backward in her seat, bringing herself into Natalie’s view. “If you can’t focus on the lecture, I’d recomnd reading the textbook. That’s what I’ve been doing. It’s much more engaging. And more importantly, informative.”

“Only you could think reading from a text book is engaging,” Natalie sneered.

“No, she’s right,” Jordan said idly. “There’s a compendium in the back detailing common monsters. It’s fairly interesting.”

Natalie experienced a brief bout of dissonance: Sofia being a nerd was annoying, but Jordan? Well, on her, it was endearing. Fortunately, she was saved from committing to a response by Liz:

“So, what are you guys up to after class? You going to the sester kick-off soirée?”

“Huh?” Kick-off soirée? “Wait, is that the party at the healer’s guild?”

“Yeah.” Liz leaned forward, grinning. “Apparently, it’s been six years since there wasn’t a casualty. It’s supposed to be crazy.”

“Casualty?” Jordan asked, alard.

“I thought they had the healer’s guild host it so things didn’t get out of hand,” Natalie said. That was what Sammy said, at least. “Aren’t you guys supposed to be the responsible ones?”

“Hey,” Liz scolded. “You shouldn’t stereotype people.”

“You were happy about being a stereotype,” Natalie pointed out. She’d had Natalie guess her role, then been pleased when she had.

“Doesn’t matter.” Liz pouted. “We’re not always responsible, okay? We know how to cut loose, too!”

Liz’s pout wasn’t doing much to help her claims. She looked way too innocent.

“There’s no way there’s casualties,” Natalie said.

“Guess we’ll have to find out. So, are you going?”

Natalie glanced at Jordan—and Sofia, seeing how she was in line of sight—who both shrugged at her.

“I am,” Natalie said, turning back. “With soone else, though. Got invited.”

“You did? Who?”

“Sammy? From the tank’s guild.”

Liz didn’t seed to recognize the na. She turned to Sofia and Jordan. “And you two?”

“Probably not,” Jordan answered. That didn’t co as a surprise. She wasn’t a sociable person—loud, chaotic parties weren’t her scene.

“I might,” Sofia said. “I’m undecided.”

Liz, naturally, seized the opportunity. “You should! You can co with . Ana’s gonna be there. And Johanna—she’s in our barracks too. You’ll like her.”

Sofia nodded slowly. Natalie could see the gears turning in her head. She and Sofia weren’t friends, but they did, unfortunately, know each other well. Sofia wasn’t enthusiastic about a party, but she recognized the rit of eting Ana—a potential future teammate—and other prominent political figures, considering Liz’s family na.

Sofia was like Jordan in that way, her brain always churning over implications and strategies, even in normal life. Which was a good thing, Natalie guessed. A desirable trait in a delver. Natalie was more of a ‘in-the-mont’ thinker. She had Jordan for the other stuff.

“That sounds fun,” Sofia said eventually. “When is it?”

“Eight,” Liz said, seeming genuinely excited at Sofia accepting. “Starts at seven, technically, but we can’t be too early. We’ll look la. That’s a death sentence at Tenet.”

“It is?”

“That’s what my brother says. And he would know. He’s the king of laness.”

Sofia gave a bemused laugh. “Eight it is, then.”

You are reading Dungeons and Dalliances 2.08 – Class on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

Moonfire & Midnight cover
Similar genre

Moonfire & Midnight

Llelo ·Mature

Anexiledprincess,apoisonedhusband,andabattleforpower—EirianSolielrefusestobeforgotten,butcansheturnacoldmarriageintoafieryalliancebeforeit’stoolate...

Resident Evil: Eddie EN cover
Similar genre

Resident Evil: Eddie EN

Mizuki77 ·Mature

Fornoapparentreason,EddieCaisuddenlygotteleportedintotheworldofResidentEvil....Readmore Forno apparentreason,EddieCaisuddenlygotteleportedintothewo...

Bloodbound to the Lycan King cover
Similar genre

Bloodbound to the Lycan King

Lenaleia ·Mature

Afatedbondthatcouldkillher.Akingwho’dratherletherdiethancraveher.Violetisn’tjustanoutsiderinherwolfpack—she’saghost.RaisedbyatraitorousAlphaanddisc...

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.