The transition ended without ceremony.
Arios staggered one step forward as the mana field released him, boots scraping against stone that was colder and denser than anything he had stepped on before. The air in this new chamber felt heavier, not in pressure but in presence, as if the space itself carried weight. It was quiet in a way that did not feel natural, the kind of silence that suggested sothing was deliberately holding its breath.
He did not rush to move.
Instead, Arios stayed still, allowing his senses to settle. His vision adjusted first. The chamber was vast, far wider than the previous evaluation zones, and its ceiling was lost in darkness. Pillars rose from the ground at irregular intervals, their surfaces etched with worn markings that looked older than the dungeon’s standard architecture. These markings were not part of the academy’s construction style. They were crude, functional, and layered over one another as if multiple groups had carved into the stone over a long period of ti.
This place had history.
Arios took a slow step forward.
The ground responded with a faint vibration, subtle enough that most would have dismissed it as imagination. He did not. The sensation traveled up through his legs and into his core, carrying information. The stone here was alive with mana, but not circulating cleanly. It pooled in so areas, stagnated in others, and flowed in jagged, unnatural paths that suggested interference.
This was not part of the controlled dungeon exam.
This was beneath it.
Arios exhaled and continued forward at a asured pace. He kept his hand near his weapon but did not draw it yet. Charging blindly into unknown territory was how people died, especially when the dungeon itself was no longer behaving according to set rules.
As he moved deeper, faint lights began to appear along the edges of the chamber. They were not torches or mana lamps. They were crystalline growths embedded in the stone, pulsing softly with a pale blue glow. So were cracked, their light flickering inconsistently. Others were completely dark, drained of whatever energy had once sustained them.
Arios approached one of the intact crystals and crouched beside it. He did not touch it. Even without contact, he could feel the instability radiating from it. The mana signature was fragnted, as if it had been forcibly redirected or siphoned at so point.
Soone had been here before.
Not recently, but not ancient either.
Arios stood and scanned the chamber again, this ti paying closer attention to the markings on the pillars. As he drew nearer, he could make out symbols—warnings, directional indicators, and crude depictions of creatures. So of the symbols were scratched out violently, overwritten by newer ones that carried a different style entirely.
This was not a single expedition’s work.
This was a layered history of intrusion.
The dungeon had been opened, altered, and resealed multiple tis.
That realization settled heavily in his mind.
The academy presented the dungeon exam as a controlled environnt, dangerous but predictable within defined paraters. What Arios was standing in now did not fit that narrative. If this section was accessible during an exam, intentionally or otherwise, then sothing fundantal about the dungeon’s structure had been compromised.
He resud walking, following a natural path that curved between the pillars. The silence persisted, broken only by the faint sound of his footsteps and the distant, almost imperceptible hum of mana flow.
Then he heard it.
A scrape.
Not behind him.
Ahead.
Arios stopped instantly, lowering his center of gravity. His eyes fixed on the darkness between two pillars roughly thirty ters away. He did not see movent, but the sound had been unmistakable—stone shifting against stone.
He waited.
Several seconds passed.
Nothing.
Then a shape detached itself from the shadow.
At first glance, it looked like a statue, humanoid in form, its surface rough and uneven like carved rock. As it stepped into the faint glow of the crystals, Arios saw that it was not stone at all, but sothing layered with mineral growths over a dense, sinewy core. Its limbs were too long, its joints bending at angles that suggested a creature adapted to crawling through narrow spaces.
Its head tilted slightly as it focused on him.
Arios drew his weapon smoothly, the motion controlled and economical.
The creature reacted instantly.
It lunged.
There was no roar, no dramatic display. It moved with silent efficiency, crossing the distance in seconds. Arios stepped to the side, letting the creature’s montum carry it past him, then brought his blade down across its back.
The strike landed cleanly.
The creature did not fall.
Instead, the mineral plating cracked, absorbing most of the impact. It twisted mid-motion, swinging an elongated arm toward Arios’s torso.
Arios blocked, the impact rattling his arms. The force was heavier than expected, carrying a shock that traveled through the blade and into his shoulders.
This was not a standard dungeon monster.
He disengaged imdiately, creating distance.
The creature adjusted, its movents jerky but purposeful. Fragnts of mineral plating fell away from its body, revealing a darker core beneath that pulsed faintly with corrupted mana.
Arios advanced again, this ti targeting the joints. He slipped past another swipe, pivoted, and drove his blade into the creature’s knee. The joint gave way with a dull crack.
The creature collapsed partially, its balance compromised.
Arios did not hesitate. He stepped in and delivered a decisive thrust to the exposed core.
The creature convulsed once, then dissolved rapidly, its body breaking apart into dust that scattered across the stone floor.
Arios stepped back, breathing steady.
The dust did not dissipate entirely.
It lingered, clinging to the ground in faint patterns before slowly being drawn into the cracks between the stones.
The dungeon absorbed it.
That was not normal behavior.
Arios wiped his blade clean and looked around. The encounter had confird what he already suspected—this area was operating under different rules. The monsters here were not simple constructs or summoned entities. They were altered, adapted, possibly created through long-term exposure to unstable mana.
He moved on.
As he progressed deeper, the chamber gradually narrowed into a series of interconnected tunnels. The walls here were rougher, bearing signs of collapse and reconstruction. In so places, the stone had been reinforced with tal braces that were now rusted and partially embedded into the surrounding rock.
These were not academy installations.
These were remnants of sothing else.
Arios slowed further, scanning each intersection carefully. The tunnels branched unpredictably, so leading upward, others descending into darkness. Mana flow was strongest along the downward paths, thick and sluggish, as if pooling below.
He chose one and descended.
The temperature dropped noticeably as he went lower. His breath beca faintly visible, and the stone beneath his boots grew slick with moisture. The crystals were fewer here, replaced by veins of faintly glowing ore embedded directly into the walls.
The glow intensified ahead.
The tunnel opened into another chamber, smaller than the first but far more unstable. The air here shimred slightly, warped by conflicting mana currents. At the center of the chamber was a circular depression filled with dark liquid that reflected no light.
Arios approached cautiously.
The liquid was not water.
It was mana in a semi-liquid state, condensed far beyond what should have been possible without specialized containnt. The surface rippled slowly, reacting to his presence.
This was dangerous.
He backed away slightly, reassessing.
The ripples grew stronger.
Then the liquid surged upward.
A form began to erge, rising slowly, deliberately. It took shape as it ascended—a mass of dark mana solidifying into a vaguely humanoid silhouette. Unlike the previous creature, this one did not rush. It stood within the depression, its form incomplete, constantly shifting as if struggling to maintain cohesion.
Arios raised his weapon.
The entity lifted its head.
Where a face should have been, there was only a swirling vortex of dark energy.
The pressure in the chamber increased sharply.
This was not just a monster.
This was a manifestation.
Arios did not wait for it to act.
He moved.
He closed the distance quickly, channeling just enough reinforcent to maintain stability without triggering the limiter’s warning. His first strike sliced through the entity’s torso.
The blade passed through resistance, but not cleanly. The dark mana clung to the steel, attempting to crawl up the weapon toward his hand.
Arios imdiately pulled back and dispelled the residue with a controlled burst of mana.
The entity reacted violently.
It surged forward, its form expanding, tendrils of dark energy lashing outward. Arios dodged one, blocked another, and was forced to retreat as the chamber itself began to respond. The walls trembled, cracks spreading rapidly.
This fight could not be prolonged.
Arios adjusted his approach.
Instead of targeting the entity’s shifting form, he focused on the source—the depression itself. He feinted left, drawing the entity’s attention, then sprinted right, leaping over a tendril and driving his blade into the edge of the mana pool.
The reaction was imdiate.
The pool destabilized, its surface boiling violently. The entity let out a sound that was not quite a scream, its form unraveling as the mana sustaining it collapsed inward.
Arios pulled back, bracing himself.
The pool imploded, sucking in the remaining energy before sealing itself with a sharp crack that echoed through the chamber.
Silence returned abruptly.
Arios stood alone, chest rising and falling steadily.
The chamber was damaged, but stable.
He took a mont to assess himself. No major injuries. Mana reserves reduced but manageable. The limiter remained quiet, satisfied with his restraint.
He looked around the chamber one last ti.
This place was not ant to be accessed.
Whatever interference had affected the dungeon had opened pathways that should have remained sealed. And if Arios could reach this depth during an exam, then others might as well.
That thought settled uneasily in his mind.
He turned toward the only remaining exit, a narrow tunnel partially obscured by fallen stone. He cleared the debris with asured strikes, careful not to destabilize the structure further.
As he stepped through, a faint tremor passed through the ground.
Not local.
Distant.
The dungeon shifted again, deeper chanisms reacting to sothing he could not see.
Arios continued forward, expression unreadable.
Phase Three was no longer just a test.
It was a warning.
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