The passage beyond the sinking pillar did not slope downward or upward, nor did it offer the familiar reassurance of a straight, predictable path. It moved forward in a way that made distance difficult to judge, as though depth itself had been tampered with. Arios noticed almost imdiately that the walls on either side were not truly parallel. They narrowed and widened in subtle, carefully asured shifts—never enough to trigger alarm, never abrupt enough to feel overtly hostile—but just enough that the sense of scale kept slipping through his grasp. The corridor refused to be read at a glance, forcing constant recalibration, as if it were quietly testing their perception rather than their endurance.
The stone here was lighter in color, streaked with faint veins that pulsed at irregular intervals. Not mana exactly, but sothing adjacent to it. Residual pressure, perhaps. Lucy reached out once, then pulled her hand back before touching the wall.
"It feels wrong," she said.
"It’s calibrated," Arios replied. "Not dangerous. Just invasive."
Liza clicked her tongue quietly. "That’s worse."
They continued forward.
Their footsteps echoed differently now. Not louder, not softer—delayed. Each step ca back half a second later, like the dungeon was replaying their movent after processing it.
Lucy slowed slightly. "I don’t like hearing myself twice."
"That’s intentional," Arios said. "It sses with timing."
"And patience," Liza added.
The corridor opened again, this ti into a wide circular chamber. The ceiling was high, but not cavernous. Thick stone columns stood evenly spaced around the periter, each one marked with faint horizontal lines at different heights.
Phase Three did not announce itself with a dramatic change in terrain or a sudden surge of enemies. Instead, it began with silence.
After leaving the circular chamber, Arios, Lucy, and Liza entered a stretch of the dungeon that felt deliberately empty. The corridor was wide enough for five people to walk side by side, yet it remained bare—no markings, no traps visible on the floor, no obvious chanisms embedded in the walls. Even the faint pulsing veins of mana-infused stone from earlier floors were gone. The rock here was dull gray, almost lifeless.
That absence made Arios uneasy.
He slowed his pace without consciously deciding to. Lucy noticed imdiately and matched him, while Liza drifted a half-step behind, her hand resting near the hilt of her practice blade.
"This floor feels cheaper," Liza muttered. "Like it was rushed."
"It’s the opposite," Arios replied. "This is intentional."
Lucy frowned. "Intentional how?"
"Everything before this trained reaction," Arios said. "Traps you could see if you focused. Enemies that tested stamina. Environnts that pressured coordination. This part removes stimulus."
Liza glanced around. "So it’s a ntal floor."
"Yes."
They continued forward.
After several minutes, Lucy exhaled sharply. "I keep expecting sothing to jump out."
"That’s the point," Arios said. "You’ll either tense up too much or relax too much."
The corridor eventually split into three paths, each identical in width and height. No markings distinguished them. No mana fluctuations. No scent differences. Even the ambient temperature remained constant.
Lucy stopped in the center. "No clues."
Liza crossed her arms. "Great. A guessing ga."
Arios studied the junction carefully. He crouched, pressing his palm against the stone floor. The surface was cool, solid, and unresponsive. He closed his eyes briefly, focusing on the flow of mana through his own body, then extending his awareness outward—not searching for power, but for absence.
"There," he said quietly, pointing to the left passage.
Lucy blinked. "You sensed sothing?"
"I sensed less," Arios replied. "The dungeon is active. It adjusts. The path with the least resistance is the one that hasn’t been tested recently."
Liza raised an eyebrow. "You’re saying the dungeon gets bored?"
"I’m saying it wants data," Arios said. "And we’re the data."
Lucy grimaced. "That’s not comforting."
They took the left path.
Within fifty steps, the corridor changed subtly. The walls drew closer together, not enough to restrict movent, but enough to create a sense of compression. The air felt heavier, though breathing remained easy.
Then Lucy stumbled.
It wasn’t dramatic—just a brief loss of balance. She caught herself against the wall, heart racing.
"I’m fine," she said quickly, before either of them could speak.
Arios watched her carefully. "You didn’t trip."
"No," Lucy admitted. "It felt like the floor tilted for half a second."
Liza tested the ground with her foot. "It’s flat."
"It wasn’t physical," Arios said. "This section alters perception."
Lucy swallowed. "So it’s ssing with balance?"
"And confidence," Arios added.
They moved more cautiously after that.
Over the next several minutes, small inconsistencies piled up. The distance between their footsteps seed uneven. Shadows stretched in directions that didn’t match the light source. Once, Lucy could have sworn she heard soone whisper her na, but when she stopped walking, the sound vanished.
Liza remained outwardly calm, but Arios noticed the way her jaw tightened whenever the environnt shifted unexpectedly.
"Say sothing," Liza muttered at one point.
Lucy glanced at her. "What?"
"Anything," Liza said. "Just to prove we’re still here."
Lucy hesitated, then said, "When we’re done with this exam, I’m sleeping for a week."
Arios allowed himself a small breath of relief. Hearing normal conversation grounded the space. The dungeon’s pressure didn’t disappear, but it beca manageable.
Eventually, the corridor ended in another chamber, this one rectangular and significantly longer than it was wide. At the far end stood a single stone pedestal. No monsters. No traps. Just the pedestal.
On top of it rested three tal tokens.
Each token was etched with a different symbol.
Lucy squinted. "That’s it?"
Liza scanned the room. "Too clean."
Arios approached slowly. As he stepped closer, faint lines appeared on the floor, branching outward from the pedestal like veins. They glowed dimly, forming a grid that covered the entire chamber.
"Conditional chanism," Arios said. "Once we interact, sothing triggers."
Lucy nodded. "Of course it does."
The three tokens were identical in size and weight, but the symbols differed. One was a simple circle. One was a vertical line. The last was a jagged shape, almost like a broken triangle.
"There are three of us," Liza said. "Let guess. Each person takes one."
"That’s the obvious assumption," Arios replied. "Which makes it suspicious."
Lucy folded her arms. "What happens if we don’t take them?"
Arios examined the pedestal more closely. "Then the dungeon likely escalates."
Liza clicked her tongue. "Figures."
They stood there for several seconds, tension building.
Finally, Lucy reached out. "I’ll take one."
Arios didn’t stop her. She picked up the token with the circle symbol. The mont her fingers closed around it, the grid on the floor pulsed once, then stabilized.
No enemies appeared. No alarms sounded.
Liza snorted. "Anti-climactic."
"Not yet," Arios said.
Liza stepped forward and took the jagged token. Another pulse. Still nothing.
Arios picked up the remaining token—the vertical line. The pedestal sank silently into the floor, vanishing entirely. The grid lines faded.
Then the chamber changed.
The far wall slid open, revealing three separate exits, each aligned with one of the symbols. The left passage bore a faint circular mark. The center had a vertical line. The right showed the jagged shape.
Lucy’s shoulders stiffened. "It’s splitting us."
"Yes," Arios said.
Liza turned sharply. "No."
"It’s not optional," Arios replied calmly. "The dungeon is forcing individual evaluation."
Lucy shook her head. "That’s not fair."
"It’s not about fairness," Arios said. "It’s about assessnt."
Silence settled between them.
Liza exhaled slowly. "So what, we just... trust it?"
Arios t her gaze. "We trust ourselves."
Lucy looked between them, fear and determination mixing in her expression. "How long?"
"I don’t know," Arios admitted. "But these exams are tid. It won’t be indefinite."
Liza straightened. "Then we finish quickly."
Lucy nodded, gripping her token tightly.
They stood there a mont longer, neither wanting to be the first to move.
Arios broke the pause. "No matter what happens, rember this: the dungeon reacts to hesitation. Keep moving."
Lucy managed a weak smile. "You sound like you’ve done this before."
"I’ve studied enough to know the patterns," Arios replied.
Liza smirked. "That’s his way of saying yes."
One by one, they stepped toward their respective passages.
Lucy stopped just before entering hers. She turned back. "Don’t take too long."
Arios nodded. "You too."
Liza didn’t say anything. She just gave a short, firm nod before disappearing into the right passage.
The walls slid shut behind them, sealing each path completely.
Arios stood alone in the center chamber for exactly three seconds before his own passage began to close. He stepped forward without hesitation.
The corridor beyond was narrower, lit by a steady, neutral glow. Unlike the earlier sections, this one felt... stable. Too stable.
As Arios walked, he reviewed everything that had happened since Phase Three began. The sensory manipulation. The forced choice. The separation.
This wasn’t about combat.
It was about isolation.
The academy’s exam designers weren’t testing strength here. They were testing how students functioned without support. Without reinforcent. Without reassurance.
Arios’s expression hardened slightly.
"That’s fine," he muttered to himself. "I’ve done worse alone."
The corridor ahead curved gently, disappearing from view.
Whatever awaited him next, it wouldn’t arrive suddenly.
The dungeon, it seed, had learned that anticipation was sharper than fear.
And it was willing to wait.
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